nettable
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]nettable (not comparable)
- Capable of being caught with a net.
- 1997, Rodney Jonklaas, Collecting Marine Fishes, page 36:
- In an emergency, a few choice fishes have been collected by enterprising divers use[sic] up to four different types of nets which can more or less catch almost any fish which is nettable.
- (finance) Capable of producing a net profit on the books.
- 1995, Alan D. Luber, Solving Business Problems with MRP II, →ISBN, page 32:
- Nonnettable inventory is one type of unavailable inventory, but there may also be some nettable inventory that is unavailable to be picked.
- 2003, Peter Field, Modern risk management: a history, page 208:
- If the two trades are not legally nettable, the second trade has almost zero impact on potential exposure. If they are legally nettable, then the second trade significantly reduces potential exposure.
- 2008, Statistisches Bundesamt, Dual Income Tax, →ISBN, page 129:
- From a constitutional law standpoint, the often debated question arises as to whether the objective net principle can be sufficiently met simply by way of a chronological loss netting within a given source of income alone or whether the rule of equality of taxation requires that losses be nettable vertically in principle except insofar as particular ground for justification, such as averting abusive tax planning, undermine the principle of setting off losses.