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float

Did you mean: float, bank, plummet, Jeffrey Float, Float (parade), Float (project management), Float (money supply), Float (breakdance move), Float (1999 Album by Aesop Rock) More...

 
Dictionary: float   (flōt) pronunciation
 

v., float·ed, float·ing, floats.

v.intr.
    1. To remain suspended within or on the surface of a fluid without sinking.
    2. To be suspended in or move through space as if supported by a liquid.
  1. To move from place to place, especially at random.
  2. To move easily or lightly: “Miss Golightly . . . floated round in their arms light as a scarf” (Truman Capote).
  3. Economics. To find a level in relationship to other currencies solely in response to the law of supply and demand: allowed the dollar to float.
v.tr.
  1. To cause to remain suspended without sinking or falling.
    1. To put into the water; launch: float a ship; float a navy.
    2. To start or establish (a business enterprise, for example).
  2. To flood (land), as for irrigation.
  3. Economics. To allow (the exchange value of a currency) to find freely its real level in relationship to other currencies.
  4. To offer for consideration; suggest: floated my idea to the committee.
  5. To release (a security) for sale.
  6. To arrange for (a loan).
  7. To make the surface of (plaster, for example) level or smooth.
  8. Computer Science. To convert (data) from fixed-point notation to floating-point notation.
n.
  1. Something that floats, as:
    1. A raft.
    2. A buoy.
    3. A life preserver.
    4. A buoyant object, such as a cork, used to hold a net or fishing line afloat.
    5. A landing platform attached to a wharf and floating on the water.
    6. A floating ball attached to a lever to regulate the water level in a tank.
  2. Biology. An air-filled sac or structure that aids in the flotation of an aquatic organism. Also called air bladder, air vesicle.
  3. A decorated exhibit or scene mounted on a mobile platform and pulled or driven in a parade.
  4. A sum of money representing checks that are outstanding.
  5. A tool for smoothing the surface of plaster or cement.
  6. A soft drink with ice cream floating in it. See Regional Note at milk shake.

[Middle English floten, from Old English flotian.]

floatable float'a·ble adj.
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In programming, a declaration of a floating point number.

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The total number of shares publicly owned and available for trading. The float is calculated by subtracting restricted shares from outstanding shares.

Also known as "free float".

Investopedia Says:
For example, a company may have 10 million outstanding shares, but only seven million are trading on the stock market. Therefore, this company's float would be seven million.

Stocks with small floats of less than three million shares tend to be a lot more volatile than others.

Related Links:
We go over different types of stock shares, which are important to understand for analyzing ratios. The Basics Of Outstanding Shares And The Float


 

1. Variations in the placement of a label on a form. Float interferes with the scan entry of the information on the label since the desired information does not move in front of the scan head in a consistent manner. Float may also interfere with the deliverability of a mailing piece if the label must be seen through an envelope window. Float is usually the result of careless label application but may be created intentionally to make a mailing piece look as if a person, and not a machine, prepared it. Marketers have tested various degrees of float to identify the precise degree of individuality people respond to best. See also optical character recognition.

2. Addressing procedure that "right justifies" (aligns along the right edge) each line of copy for a neat look. See also justify.

3. Placement of a space advertisement in an area larger than necessary to accommodate the dimensions of the advertisement.

4. Money given to an advertising agency by the advertiser that may be invested or otherwise used, prior to its delivery to the media owners for which it is intended.

 

Dollar value of cash balances created by the time lag in processing unpaid checks. Collection float is interest that may be lost to the depositor; payment float is interest that may be gained by the payer. The largest component of float is Federal Reserve Float created when a Federal Reserve Bank credits the reserve account of a collecting bank before it has collected from the paying bank. Other kinds of float are Mail Float caused by delays in mail handling between cities; holiday float created when a bank is not open for business due to a state or national holiday; and return item float, created when checks are returned for insufficient funds or other reasons. At greater distances between paying and receiving banks, bank clearing float tends to increase, although federal legislation enacted in 1987 requires banks to adhere to uniform funds availability on out-of-town checks, which will give banks an incentive to hold clearing float at a minimum. A bank customer's Average Daily Float is often calculated for purposes of Account Analysis. See also Available Balance; Regulation Cc.

 

1. The interval of time after a deposit or withdrawal is made and before the transaction is credited or deducted.
Example: Abel writes a check to pay a Debt to Baker. Baker deposits the check in a bank other than the one used by Abel. Abel's bank may have a float of 2 or 3 days before Baker's bank collects the money.

2. The difference between a Variable Interest Rate and the Index to which it is pegged.
Example: A bank makes construction loans at 3% over the Prime Rate. The 3% is the float.

3. To incur a debt.
Example: To fund a project, Atlas Company may float a loan or float a Bond issue.

 
Food and Nutrition: floats
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Caribbean (Trinidad); fried biscuits made with yeast dough. See also bakes.

 

n. 1. A soft drink (such as root beer) with a scoop or two of ice cream floating in it. 2. A small amount of liquid (such as liqueur or cream) that sits atop another liquid without mixing in. float v. To slowly pour a liquid (such as liqueur or cream) onto the top of another liquid so that it floats on top of the liquid below. In the case of a pousse-café, several liquids are floated, one on top of the other, so as not to mix together.

 
Thesaurus: float
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verb

  1. To move along with or be carried away by the action of water: drift, wash. See move/halt.
  2. To pass quickly and lightly through the air: dart, fly, sail, shoot, skim. See move/halt.

 
Antonyms: float
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v

Definition: lie on the surface, hover
Antonyms: drown, sink


 

n. a thing that is buoyant in water, especially a hollow structure fixed underneath an aircraft enabling it to take off and land on water.

See the Introduction, Abbreviations and Pronunciation for further details.

 
Architecture: float
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A flat tool with a handle on the back; used on cement or plaster surfaces for smoothing or for producing textured surfaces. Also see angle float, bull float, carpet float, rotary float.


 
Law Dictionary: Float
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Refers to checks that are in transit between banks and that have not yet been paid; checks in the process of collection, which, when entered in a depositor's account, remain conditional credits until the checks are paid to the bank in money; also refers to the practice of writing a check with insufficient funds and then covering the check before it returns to the bank for payment. 15 B.R. 937, 941.

 

1. an instrument used in the filing or rasping of a horse's premolar and molar teeth. Handles are 24 to 28 in (60 to 70 cm) with a broad head into which an interchangeable rasp can be screwed. Some rasps work when pulled toward the operator, others work only when pushed away. Short-handled floats with the heads set at an angle are used for the front upper molars.
2. in British countries, the term for a road vehicle used for the transport of large animals, usually horses or cattle. A low-level float may be an independent unit towed behind another vehicle. A high-level float is standard-truck height and an integral part of the vehicle.

 

To be deployed at sea, usually on a MEU as in "six month float"

 
Word Tutor: float
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: To remain suspended within or on the surface of a fluid without sinking.

pronunciation They floated down the river on rafts.

 
Wikipedia: Free float
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The free float of a public company is an estimate of the proportion of shares that are not held by large owners and that are not stock with sales restrictions (restricted stock that cannot be sold until they become unrestricted stock).

The free float or a public float is usually defined as being all shares held by investors other than:

  • shares held by owners owning more than 5% of all shares (those could be institutional investors, "strategic shareholders," founders, executives, and other insiders' holdings)
  • restricted stocks (granted to executives that can be, but don't have to be, registered insiders)
  • insider holdings (it is assumed that insiders hold stock for the very long term)

The free float is an important criterion[clarification needed] in quoting a share on the stock market.[citation needed]

To float a company means to list its shares on a public stock exchange through an initial public offering (or "flotation").

See also

External links



 
Translations: Float
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Dansk (Danish)
v. intr. - flyde, bringe på markedet, komme dryssende
v. tr. - bringe flot, oversvømme, forhandle
n. - ponton, luftblære, byttepenge

idioms:

  • float on air    svæve
  • float someone's boat    hidse nogen op

Nederlands (Dutch)
(doen) drijven, zweven, dwalen, plek in de geldmarkt verwerven (geldsoort), onder water zetten, recht maken, indienen, sluiten, (aandelen) op de markt brengen, dobber, drijver, vlot, kar met platform (b.v. in corso), actieve aandelen, gas/luchtballon in lichaam, troffel, landtoelage, uitstaand geld, tijd tussen transactie en geldopname, frisdrank met ijs

Français (French)
v. intr. - flotter, nager, surnager, faire la planche, (Fin) flotter (une monnaie), mettre un navire à flot
v. tr. - faire flotter, flotter, faire circuler une rumeur
n. - flotteur, bouchon, (Aviat) flotteur, (GB) planche (de natation), (US) gilet de sauvetage, char, (Comm) fonds (de caisse), (US) soda (avec une boule de glace), (US, Fin) délai avant l'encaissement d'un chèque, (GB, Constr) taloche/bouclier, masse des effets de circulation

idioms:

  • float on air    être aux anges
  • float someone's boat    exciter (qn)

Deutsch (German)
v. - schweben, gründen, in Umlauf bringen, treiben, flott werden
n. - Schwimmer, Floß, Festwagen, kleine Kasse, Korken, Schwimmblase, Rampenlicht

idioms:

  • float on air    sich wie im siebten Himmel fühlen
  • float someone's boat    jemanden faszinieren

Ελληνική (Greek)
v. - επιπλέω, (οικον.) ιδρύω επιχείρηση, εκδίδω ομολογίες, δάνειο, κ.λπ., διαδίδω, κυκλοφορώ, επιτρέπω τη διακύμανση (νομίσματος)
n. - πλωτήρας (κν. φλοτέρ), σχεδία, αποκριάτικο άρμα, κάρο-πλατφόρμα

idioms:

  • float on air    πλανώμαι
  • float someone's boat    ερεθίζω, διεγείρω, φτιάχνω (κάποιον)

Italiano (Italian)
aleggiare, essere sospeso, galleggiare, stare a galla, galleggiante, salvagente, vescica natatoria, carro allegorico, (USA) bevanda con pallina di gelato, fluttuazione

Português (Portuguese)
v. - flutuar
n. - bóia (f), carroça (f) ou carro (m) (usado em procissões ou desfiles)

idioms:

  • float on air    pairar
  • float someone's boat    fazer alguém feliz

Русский (Russian)
плавать, выпускать заем/акции, пускать (слух), поплавок

idioms:

  • float on air    витать в облаках

Español (Spanish)
v. intr. - flotar, planear, nadar, sobrenadar, flotar en la superficie
v. tr. - poner, mantener o llevar a flote, emitir o poner en circulación
n. - flotador, balsa, boya, salvavidas

idioms:

  • float on air    estar en las nubes, no caber en sí de gozo
  • float someone's boat    complacer o agradar muchísimo a alguien

Svenska (Swedish)
v. - flyta, sväva, flacka, hålla flytande
n. - flotta, flöte, simorgan (zool.), handkassa

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
浮动, 散播, 飘浮, 使漂浮, 淹没, 容纳, 漂流物, 漂浮, 浮舟

idioms:

  • float on air    洋洋得意
  • float someone's boat    使某人喜欢

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
v. intr. - 浮動, 散播, 飄浮
v. tr. - 使漂浮, 淹沒, 容納
n. - 漂流物, 漂浮, 浮舟

idioms:

  • float on air    洋洋得意
  • float someone's boat    使某人喜歡

한국어 (Korean)
v. intr. - 뜨다, 떠오르다, 설립되다, 유랑하다
v. tr. - 띄우다, 떠오르게 하다, 퍼뜨리다, 감돌게 하다
n. - 뜨는 물건, 뗏목, 구명대, 찌

日本語 (Japanese)
v. - 浮く, 浮かべる, 浮かぶ, 漂う, 浮動する, 起こす, 流れ歩く, 変動相場制になる, 変動相場制にする, 流れる, 流す
n. - 浮くもの, いかだ, 浮き, 山車

idioms:

  • float on air    うきうきして
  • float someone's boat    してあげる

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(فعل) يطفو , يعوم (الاسم) عوامه , منصه عائمه‏

עברית (Hebrew)
v. intr. - ‮צף, ריחף, הפיץ שמועה‬
v. tr. - ‮הציף שער-מטבע, השיט, ייסד חברה, הפיץ שמועה, דאה באוויר, הציע (מניות) למכירה בבורסה‬
n. - ‮מצוף, מכל-אוויר, קרון-תצוגה, דוברה, מעגן‬


 
Best of the Web: float
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Some good "float" pages on the web:


American Sign Language
commtechlab.msu.edu
 
 
 

Did you mean: float, bank, plummet, Jeffrey Float, Float (parade), Float (project management), Float (money supply), Float (breakdance move), Float (1999 Album by Aesop Rock) More...


 

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