commoditisedの例文
- Check out the variety of ways that commoditised used stamps are sold.
- Most of the things we pay quite a lot for now will become commoditised.
- Eventually, we will be offering electronic commerce for services which have been commoditised ( sic ).
- Will the market be heavily commoditised, or will there be highermargins in non-standard services?
- Anna opposed the act as she felt it legitimised prostitution, commoditised women and undermined family life.
- RFQs are best suited to products and services that are as standardised and as commoditised as possible, as this makes each supplier's quote comparable.
- During 2005 2010 he was also researching the Tswana and San people and how ethnicity identity and cultural property is becoming commoditised ( Comaroff, 2013 ).
- Indeed, many aspects of Thai society, such as architecture, clothing and history, have been distorted if not wiped out, leaving only its superficial and commoditised version with us.
- The Supply Contract is for big bespoke items i . e . designed and manufactured specifically for that contract, with the Short Supply Contract potentially being for more run of the mill / commoditised items on a project.
- But as it's free, it's commoditised, so no-one is going to be able to sell it for very much .-- Talk 23 : 53, 9 December 2005 ( UTC)
- On the other hand, there is nothing restricting the amount of gold mined either & mdash; while this hasn't happened to gold, many other materials once considered valuable enough to use as currency have been commoditised.
- Members include the key coal producers, traders and consumers in the world . globalCOAL has also developed the Standard Coal Trading Agreement ( SCoTA ) which is now the coal industry's standard contract for trading in commoditised physical coal products.
- This is one of the obvious corrolaries of the free information licence-sure they can republish the information, but so can anyone else, and so the information is commoditised .-- Talk 11 : 43, September 11, 2005 ( UTC)
- They do this because voice telephony is a commoditised, low-margin, cost-plus business ( so there's not much to be gained from competing hard on it ) while broadband, cableTV, and mobile telephony carry bigger profits and have much more opportunity for growth-so they compete on those, and chucking in telephony doesn't cost them much.