0 material made of threads of rope, string, wire, or plastic with spaces between them, allowing gas, liquid, or small objects to go through, or an object made with this material that is used to limit the movement of something: --
1 a rectangular piece of material made from string, used to separate the two sides in various sports: --
2 to catch something using a net: --
3 If you net the ball during a game such as football, you score a goal: --
5 abbreviation for internet : --
It would have been useful if the editors had been able to accomplish a similar thing regarding the topic of whether pensions are net saving.
Humans are typically not very altruistic in situations where theory cannot find any long-term net benefits.
Rising levels of net disposable income allowed town-dwellers to climb the housing ladder, thereby reducing some at least of the ravages of infection.
Such nets are valuable for the design of free-form surfaces.
The surfaces generated by subdivision schemes on such nets are no longer restricted to bivariate functions, and they can represent surfaces of arbitrary topology.
The net result is reduced diversity in provision.
The net impact concerns the effect on parties.
The constant represents the expected project yield in capital (per unit invested), net of monitoring costs.