Akademik

deliver
The sale of a futures or forward contract may require the seller to deliver the commodity during the delivery month, if the short position is not offset prior to that time. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary

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deliver de‧liv‧er [dɪˈlɪvə ǁ -ər] verb
1. [transitive] to take goods or mail to a place:

• An average of 52 tankers a day deliver 462 million gallons of crude oil, gasoline and other petroleum products to the U.S.

• The new computers will be delivered next week.

2. [intransitive, transitive] to provide or achieve something that other people benefit from:

• Since January 2005, the fund has delivered an annual return of 14.7%.

• Good government can deliver a high level of services while maintaining fiscal discipline.

deliver on

• The question is whether the company can deliver on these commitments.

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deliver UK US /dɪˈlɪvər/ verb
[I or T] to take goods, letters, parcels, etc. to a place: deliver goods/mail/products »

Manufacturers can deliver goods directly from factories.

»

Most stores will deliver between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m.

deliver sth to sb/sth »

Together, the three groups deliver 340,000 meals a year to homebound people.

[T] to provide a service: »

We want world-class wages and conditions for our people to match the world class services that they deliver.

»

The company is working tirelessly to deliver improved services for passengers.

[I or T] to achieve, provide, or produce something: »

The price wars we see among retailers are a direct result of their need to maximise market share and deliver profits to shareholders.

deliver a rise/increase in sth »

We have been able to deliver a 40% rise in revenues and profits for the seventh successive year.

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deliver growth/returns/savings

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deliver benefits/results/improvements

[I] to do something that has been promised: »

The main complaint from analysts is that the company says all the right things but fails to deliver.

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In particular, critics cite his failure to deliver on a promise to attract half-a-million customers for the new service by last summer.

[I or T] to manufacture and supply something to a customer: »

Boeing predicts that manufacturers will deliver 28,600 airplanes worth $2.8 trillion by 2026.

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Our key aim is to deliver a quality product to the consumer.

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Officials say the merger should be invisible, as the new company will continue to deliver electricity and gas to customers and be regulated by the same body.

[T] to make a speech or an official statement: deliver a briefing/report/speech »

She is due to deliver a keynote speech to finance ministers this afternoon.

»

The water industry regulator is due to deliver his verdict on the proposed takeover today.

deliver content — Cf. deliver content
deliver a blow to sb/sth — Cf. deliver a blow to sth
deliver the goods — Cf. deliver the goods

Financial and business terms. 2012.