commercial treaty
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A formal agreement between two or more nations that establishes the rules and conditions for trade and commerce between them. It aims to regulate and facilitate international business activities.
Examples
- The two countries signed a commercial treaty to reduce tariffs on imported goods.
- Negotiating a new commercial treaty was essential for improving economic relations.
- The 19th-century commercial treaty opened the port to foreign merchants.
Advanced Usage
- "to be party to a commercial treaty": to be one of the nations that has signed and is bound by the agreement.
- Several small nations are party to the same multilateral commercial treaty.
- "to negotiate/ratify/abrogate a commercial treaty": to discuss and settle the terms of, formally approve, or formally repeal such an agreement.
- The parliament voted to ratify the new commercial treaty.
Variants and Related Words
- Trade agreement (n): A similar, sometimes less formal, pact concerning trade. (Often used interchangeably with "commercial treaty," though a treaty is typically a more binding, formal instrument under international law).
- Bilateral/Multilateral treaty (n): Specifies an agreement between two parties (bilateral) or more than two (multilateral). A commercial treaty can be either.
Synonyms
- Trade pact
- Commercial agreement
Related Phrases
- Most-favored-nation clause: A common provision in commercial treaties where a country guarantees another country the same favorable trade terms it offers to any other "most favored" nation.
- The commercial treaty included a most-favored-nation clause.
Noun
- a treaty governing commerce between two or more nations