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Definition of Gross revenue
1. Noun. Income (at invoice values) received for goods and services over some given period of time.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Gross Revenue
Literary usage of Gross revenue
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Railway Economy: A Treatise on the New Art of Transport, Its Management by Dionysius Lardner (1850)
"E showing the Share of every £100 of gross Revenue contributed by each Class of
Traffic on the under-mentioned French Railways. By comparing the mileage of ..."
2. Niles' Weekly Register edited by Hezekiah Niles, Jeremiah Hughes, George Beatty (1816)
"A duty on licences to retailers of wines, spirits, and foreign merchandize,
including tavern-keepers, calculated to yield a gross revenue of 500000 1st. ..."
3. Supreme Court Reporter by Robert Desty, United States Supreme Court, West Publishing Company (1914)
"This would have been a large reduction in the gross revenue from that particular
... Thus, it was assumed that, as the gross revenue from this classified ..."
4. Auditing Theory and Practice by Robert Hiester Montgomery (1912)
"The disposition of the gross revenue of the Bell System for the year of 1911, as
reported by the company, was as follows: Salaries and Wages 50% Materials, ..."
5. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"The gross revenue of the district in 1883-81 was £io,34U, of which £65,-140 was
derived from the land-tax. it was brought under the general regulations and ..."
6. Public Utilities Reports by Henry Clifford Spurr, Ellsworth Nichols, Public Utilities Reports, inc (1918)
"Value should not depend upon what it cost to operate a property regardless of
the revenue, neither should it be judged by the gross revenue without ..."
7. Lawyers' Reports Annotated by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1917)
"Under the latter act the tax is designated as a "gross production" tax, while
under the former it is referred to' as a "gross revenue" tax, and is payable ..."