liquidation 英 [lɪkwɪ'deɪʃ(ə)n]   美 [,lɪkwɪ'deʃən]

liquidation

liquidation  英 [lɪkwɪ'deɪʃ(ə)n] 美 [,lɪkwɪ'deʃən]

n. 清算;偿还;液化;清除 

名词复数:liquidations 

That has given the system an unfortunate bias towards liquidation, he fears. 他担心,那会给这种制度一个不幸的偏好——破产清算。
The social and economic consequences if they end up in liquidation would be grave, he says. 他说,如果它们以清算结束,其社会和经济影响将是巨大的。

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  • n. 清算;偿还;液化;清除
  • 1. That has given the system an unfortunate bias towards liquidation, he fears.

    他担心,那会给这种制度一个不幸的偏好——破产清算。

  • 2. The social and economic consequences if they end up in liquidation would be grave, he says.

    他说,如果它们以清算结束,其社会和经济影响将是巨大的。

  • 3. Consequently, most of the decline in real GDP during prior recessions was attributable to inventory liquidation, which meant cutbacks in production and jobs, and sharp reductions in capital spending.

    因此,在先前衰退期间,真实GDP的大部分减少可归咎于存货清算,这意味着生产和工作的缩减,以及资本支出的急剧减少。

  • liquidation (n.) 1570s, in law, of debts, noun of action from past participle stem of Late Latin liquidare "melt, make liquid" (see liquidate). Originally as a legal term in reference to assets; of companies going out of business, 1869; of inconvenient groups of persons, "a killing, a wiping out," 1925 in communist writings. In O. Henry, "the act of taking a drink of liquor."
li·quid·ation / ˌlɪkwɪˈdeɪʃn ; NAmE ˌlɪkwɪˈdeɪʃn / noun [uncountable ] 1 ( BrE, AustralE) ( law ) the process of closing a company, selling what it owns and paying its debts (公司的)清盘,清算;(债务的)清偿 The company has gone into liquidation. 这家公司已破产。 collocationsat business compare Chapter 11 2 ( finance ) the action of selling sth to get money or to avoid losing money (资产的)变现,变卖 Falling prices may lead to further liquidation of stocks. 股价下跌可能导致股票的进一步变现。 liquidation liquidations li·quid·ation / ˌlɪkwɪˈdeɪʃn ; NAmE ˌlɪkwɪˈdeɪʃn /
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