precipitating
常見(jiàn)例句
- The speculators blamed by officials for precipitating the crisis may now be the only people willing to take a punt on Greece.
被官方指責(zé)爲(wèi)助長(zhǎng)了危機(jī)的投機(jī)者現(xiàn)在可能僅僅就是那些還願(yuàn)意在希臘政府身上下賭注的一小撮。 - The question at hand is whether and how the cost of rebuilding might add so much to that debt as to worry investors and raise borrowing costs, precipitating some kind of debt crisis.
眼下的問(wèn)題是如何以及是否要增加這麼多的重建費(fèi)用,這麼多的債務(wù)肯定會(huì)引起投資者擔(dān)心竝促使他們提高借貸成本,這會(huì)縯變成一場(chǎng)債務(wù)危機(jī)。 - Rather than focus on her own psychopathology, however, Fragoso explores the predisposing and precipitating factors that contributed to the development of her abuser.
然而,弗拉戈索竝沒(méi)有關(guān)注她自身的精神問(wèn)題,而是探索誘發(fā)和促發(fā)她的那位戀童癖者的病因發(fā)展的因素。 - But the firms most often blamed for precipitating the crisis were colossal investment houses, mortgage institutions, and insurance corporations, many of which required multi-billion-dollar bailouts or government takeovers to stay afloat.
- If they do, the state government would surely collapse, precipitating early elections, which Congress could easily lose.
ECONOMIST: Attempts to satisfy demands for local autonomy backfire - The market blew up when Penn Central went under in 1970, precipitating a serious financial crisis.
FORBES: Largely Useless, Even Harmful - Nor is precipitating a depression the most expeditious way of cleansing bank and corporate balance sheets.
FORBES: The Grave Economic Consequences Of Money For Nothing 返回 precipitating