recession

英[rɪˈseʃn]
美[rɪˈseʃn]

基本释义

n.
经济衰退,不景气; 后退,撤退; 凹处; 退场

词性变化

实用例句

the impact of the current recession on manufacturing

时下经济萎缩对制造业的影响

牛津词典

The economy is in deep recession .

经济正处于严重的衰退之中。

牛津词典

policies to pull the country out of recession

引导国家走出经济萎缩的政策

牛津词典

the gradual recession of the floodwater

洪水的渐渐消退

牛津词典

The recession caused sales to drop off...

经济不景气使销量下降。

We should concentrate on sharply reducing interest rates to pull the economy out of recession...

我们应该着力大幅下调利率以使经济走出衰退。

The recent recession was long and severe; many companies failed to weather the storm.

最近这次经济萧条时间长且严重, 许多公司未能渡过难关.

《简明英汉词典》

Some employers reneged on agreements once the recession set in.

经济一衰退,有些雇主就违背了协议.

《简明英汉词典》

The economy is in recession.

经济处于衰退之中。

《牛津高阶英汉双解词典》

the impact of the current recession on manufacturing

时下经济萎缩对制造业的影响

《牛津高阶英汉双解词典》

The recession is definitely at an end.

经济衰退无疑已经告终。

柯林斯例句

Then came the recession. Revenues dropped, but the straw to break the camel's back was the war.

之后出现了经济衰退,财政收入下降,但致命的打击还是那场战争。

柯林斯例句

We should concentrate on sharply reducing interest rates to pull the economy out of recession.

我们应该着力大幅下调利率以使经济走出衰退。

柯林斯例句

The fall in inflation is the silver lining of the prolonged recession.

通货膨胀的下降是长期经济衰退中的一线转机。

柯林斯例句

Predictions that the recession will be short are small comfort to those already affected.

关于经济衰退不会延续很长时间的预测对那些已经受到影响的人来说只是小小的安慰。

柯林斯例句

Never before has the industry had to cope with war and recession at the same time.

这个行业以前从未有过必须同时应付战争和萧条的经历。

柯林斯例句

The recession may already be severe enough to ordain structural change.

这次经济衰退可能已经严重到必须进行体制变革的地步了。

柯林斯例句

Japan's recession has prompted consumers to cut back on buying cars.

日本经济的不景气使得消费者在购买车辆上减少了开支。

柯林斯例句

The recession is eating away at their revenues.

经济衰退正在消耗他们的财政收入。

柯林斯例句

The government will squeeze the economy into a severe recession to force inflation down.

政府将紧缩经济,使之出现严重衰退,以此迫使通货膨胀率下降。

柯林斯例句

In the teeth of the longest recession since the 1930s, the company continues to perform well.

尽管面对20世纪30年代以来持续时间最长的经济衰退,这家公司却一直经营良好。

柯林斯例句

The recent deterioration has been caused by an apparently endless recession.

看似永无止境的经济衰退导致了最近的恶化。

柯林斯例句

I will not take issue with the fact that we have a recession.

我不否认经济衰退的事实。

柯林斯例句

The recession has created an atmosphere where disparate groups fraternise in an atmosphere of mutual support.

大萧条使得不同集团在友爱互助的气氛中如兄弟般亲密往来。

柯林斯例句

The rise in industrial production helped chase away lingering fears that the economy is slipping into a new recession.

工业产出的增长有助于驱除人们对于经济正再次陷入衰退的挥之不去的担忧。

柯林斯例句

A recession like that of 1973–1974 could put one in ten American companies into bankruptcy.

像1973–1974年间那样的经济衰退能让1/10的美国公司破产。

柯林斯例句

The country is in the depths of a recession.

该国正遭遇最严重的经济衰退。

柯林斯例句

The recession started biting deeply into British industry.

经济萧条开始对英国的工业产生严重影响。

柯林斯例句

New figures indicate the recession may be easing up.

新的数据显示经济衰退可能有所缓和。

柯林斯例句

Looking at the figures, you could be forgiven for thinking the recession is already over.

看看这些数字,难怪你会觉得经济衰退已经结束了。

柯林斯例句

真题例句

The continuing economic recession in the country.

出自-2017年6月阅读原文

The global economy is likely to undergo another recession.

出自-2016年12月阅读原文

Consumers, in the U.S. at least, are acting cautiously with the savings they're getting at the gas pump, as the memory of the recent great recession is still fresh in their mind.

出自-2016年12月阅读原文

If you think so, you're not alone, because energy independence has been the dream of American president for decades, and never more so than in the past few years, when the most recent oil price shock has been partly responsible for kicking off the great recession.

出自-2014年6月阅读原文

Surviving the Recession America's recession began quietly at the end of

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

com, predicts that the recession will shrink America's economy by

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

Few Americans understand what caused the recession.

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

From the first paragraph, we learn that America's recession is the result of a combination of causes

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

According to Arne Sorenson, the president of Marriott hotels, the current recession hit his business as hard as the 9/11 terrorist attack.

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

The joy of a recession means no argument next year - we just won't go.

出自-2011年12月阅读原文

For many families the recession means more than not booking a holiday A You Gov poll of 2, 000 people found 22% said they were arguing more with their partners because of concerns about money

出自-2011年12月阅读原文

What's less clear is whether divorce and separation rates rise in a recession - financial pressures mean couples argue more but make splitting up less affordable.

出自-2011年12月阅读原文

People enjoy it all the more during a recession

出自-2011年12月阅读原文

The You Gov poll of 2, 000 people indicates that in a recession it is more expensive for couples to split up.

出自-2011年12月阅读原文

It goes down during economic recession.

出自-2010年6月听力原文

Initially in the wake of the recession, college enrollments expanded, boosting title ranks of young adults living at home.

2019年6月四级真题(第二套)阅读 Section B

The Great Recession and modest recovery has also been associated with an increase in young adults living at home.

2019年6月四级真题(第二套)阅读 Section B

The immediate cause for the collapse has been Britain's slide toward recession, which has cut into consumer spending.

2015年12月四级真题(第一套)听力 Section A

It is a direct result of the global economic recession.

出自-2017年6月阅读原文

Ask the administration or the Republicans or most academics why America needs more manufacturing, and they respond that manufacturing gives birth to innovation, brings down the trade deficit, strengthens the dollar, generates jobs, arms the military and brings about a recovery from recession.

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

Axelrod of Home Depot, people are trying to ride out the recession by doing more themselves

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

Recession closely follows a skyscraper boom.

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

What distinguishes a depression from a harsh recession is paralyzing fear - fear of the unknown so great that it causes consumers, businesses, and investors to retreat and panic

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

A shattering loss of confidence inspires behavior that overwhelms the normal self-correcting mechanisms that usually prevent a recession from becoming deep and prolonged: a depression.

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

Government's failure to perform this role in the early 1930s transformed recession into depression

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

What does Christina Romer say about the current economic recession?

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

Why didn't the current recession turn into a depression according to Christina Romer

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

The recession permanently wiped out 2.5 million jobs.

出自-2012年12月阅读原文

D The robotic industry has benefited from the economic recession

出自-2012年12月阅读原文

Over the past two years, the figures on imports and exports seem not to signal a double-dip recession – a renewed decline in the broad level of economic activity in the United States – but an economic expansion.

出自-2011年12月阅读原文

economy is slipping further into recession

出自-2011年12月阅读原文

The recession has certainly come with more problems than Andrea anticipated, but she remains unfailingly optimistic.

出自-2012年12月听力原文

What is Andrea's attitude toward the hardships brought by the economic recession

出自-2012年12月听力原文

As careers and vocations become less available during times of recession, adolescents may be especially hard hit.

2016年6月六级真题(第三套)阅读 Section A

New research says the US recession is now over, but many people remain unemployed.

2016年6月六级真题(第一套)听力 Section C

The researchers also note the recession hit some years before we see the beginning of the well-being drop, and before the steepest well-being decline, which occurred in 2013.

2019年12月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section B

There is another explanation that Twenge and her colleagues wanted to address: the impact of the great recession of 2007-2009, which hit a great number of American families and might be affecting adolescents.

2019年12月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section B

Not long ago, with the country entering a recession and Japan at its pre-bubble peak.

出自-2009年考研阅读原文

Meanwhile, as the recession is looming large, people are getting anxious.

出自-2010年考研阅读原文

"They blame it on the manufacturing recession," says birgit Klohs, chief executive of The right Place, a business development agency for western michigan.

2017年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

Davidson's article is one of a number of pieces that have recently appeared making the point that the reason we have such stubbornly high unemployment and declining middle-class incomes today is largely because of the big drop in demand because of the Gre

2013年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

From career to community and family, these contrasts suggest that in the aftermath of the searing Great Recession, those just starting out in life are defining priorities and expectations that will increasingly spread through virtually all aspects of Amer

2016年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

German and Brazilian papers have shrugged off the recession.

2011年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

In limited respects, perhaps the recession will leave society better off.

2012年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

Income inequality usually falls during a recession, but it has not shrunk in this one.

2012年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

Involuntary part-time employment is still far higher than before the recession, but it is down by 640,000from its year ago level.

2015年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

The great recession may be over, but this era of high joblessness is probably beginning.

2012年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

The recession threatened to remove the advertising and readers that had not already fled to the Internet.

2011年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

The research of till Von Wachter, the economist in Columbia University, suggests that not all people graduating into a recession see their life chances dimmed: those with degrees from elite universities catch up fairly quickly to where they otherwise woul

2012年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

英英释义

Noun
  • 1. the state of the economy declines; a widespread decline in the GDP and employment and trade lasting from six months to a year

  • 2. a small concavity

  • 3. the withdrawal of the clergy and choir from the chancel to the vestry at the end of a church service

  • 4. the act of ceding back

  • 5. the act of becoming more distant