Englishfor English speakers
tangible
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adjective
perceptible by the senses especially the sense of touch
skin with a tangible roughness
—
adjective
(= real)
capable of being treated as fact
tangible evidence
his brief time as Prime Minister brought few real benefits to the poor
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adjective
(of especially business assets) having physical substance and intrinsic monetary value
tangible property like real estate
tangible assets such as machinery
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adjective
(= palpable)
capable of being perceived; especially capable of being handled or touched or felt
a barely palpable dust
felt sudden anger in a palpable wave
the air was warm and close--palpable as cotton
a palpable lie
personal
Adjective
—
If something is personal, that means it is tied to you.
When I die, I will give you my personal wealth.
Don't make personal remarks.
business
Noun
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Business is the buying and selling of things or services.
I am in the business of catching fish and selling them.
The tax changes will be hard for small business.
It's difficult to learn good business practices on your own.
The company is a leader in the banking business.
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A business is a group that does business; a company.
Many businesses use computers.
Darren became half owner of the family business.
He was a silent partner in the printing business.
It was the perfect place for a start-up business.
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Business is the things that you have to do.
They went on with business as usual.
We have one more piece of unfinished business to look at before we leave.
property
Noun
—
Property is a thing or things that belong to someone; things that someone owns.
This house is now my property. I've finished paying for it.
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A property is a quality that something has; a way that something is.
One good property of this coat is that it keeps rain out.