liquidation
liquidation 英 [lɪkwɪ'deɪʃ(ə)n] 美 [,lɪkwɪ'deʃən]
n. 清算;偿还;液化;清除
名词复数:liquidations
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- n. 清算;偿还;液化;清除
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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。
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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。
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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."
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