英:[ˈbeɪlaʊt]
美:[ˈbelˌaʊt]
英:[ˈbeɪlaʊt]
美:[ˈbelˌaʊt]
bail·out
beIl aUt [or] beIl aUt
1945年,航空业中也出现了“bail-out”一词,指的是飞行员的动作。参见 bail(v.1)和 out(adv.)。1968年起,“bail”一词也指“联邦政府帮助陷入困境的私营企业”,但不清楚这里指的是哪种意义。
跳伞
抽资
用企业资金支付额外股息
以优先股发给股东作为红利
融资
紧急救助
The first known use of bailout was in 1925
bake1 of 2verb
to cook or become cooked by dry heat especially in an oven
to dry or harden by heat
bake bricks
to be or become very hot
a sidewalk baking in the sun
bake2 of 2noun
the act or process of baking
a social gathering at which a baked food is servedespecially: clambake
bait1 of 2verb
to torment by repeated attacks
to torment (an animal) with dogs
to put bait on or in
bait a hook
bait2 of 2noun
something (as food) used to attract animals to a hook or into a trap
a poisonous material put where it will be eaten by and kill harmful or undesirable animals
lure sense 1, temptation
bait1 of 2verb
to torment by repeated attacks
to torment (an animal) with dogs
to put bait on or in
bait a hook
bait2 of 2noun
something (as food) used to attract animals to a hook or into a trap
a poisonous material put where it will be eaten by and kill harmful or undesirable animals
lure sense 1, temptation
bairnnoun
child sense 1, 2a
bail1 of 5noun
a container used to remove water from a boat
bail2 of 5verb
to remove (water) from a boat by dipping and throwing over the side—usually used with out
bail3 of 5noun
the temporary release of a prisoner in exchange for a deposit of money ensuring the later appearance of the prisoner in court
the deposit of money needed to temporarily free a prisoner
a person who provides bail
bail4 of 5verb
to get the release of (a prisoner) by giving bail
bail5 of 5noun
a semicircular support
the handle of a kettle or pail
bail outverb
to jump out of an airplane with a parachute
to help from a difficult situation
1 An internal EU report leaked to journalists in Brussels on Monday painted a gloomy picture that warned more bailouts may be needed unless government reforms start to produce growth.
2 "I want people to know I've been working hard my whole life," said Sanchez after her bailout.
3 Pressed about his past support for Wall Street bailouts, Romney presented them as a necessary but unfortunate task.
4 It’s a sentiment we’ve heard before from the Tea Party in arguments about tax reform, economic inequality and corporate bailouts.
5 The European Central Bank wants another bailout.
欧洲央行希望再进行一轮紧急援助。
6 “It’s clear the airlines are being obstinate about refunds, despite the taxpayer bailout,” he says.
7 Portugal, which needed a financial bailout in 2011, only recently emerged from its worst recession since the 1970s.
8 Berlin is waiting until the troika release a report on Greece’s debt sustainability before the Bundestag votes on whether to back the bailout on February 27.
9 Then came the mortgage crisis, the Wall Street bailout and the forest of foreclosure signs across California, the skyrocketing unemployment and the anti-immigrant backlash among conservative politicians.
10 How would Congress feel about such a bailout?
国会对这样一个救助方案会做何感想?
11 At GM much of this is the result of the boardroom enema forcibly administered to the company by the US government as one condition of its massive 2009 auto bailouts.
12 The hammer got his way, the markets collapsed, and progressives like Nancy Pelosi, Bernie Sanders and Mr. Obama, who had hammered the hammer over bank bailouts, were empowered to rewrite America’s banking laws.
13 Budget reductions are tied to the bailout.
削减预算是接受援救计划的必要条件。
14 A potential bailout is one of a number of measures being debated to help American workers and businesses survive the recession wrought by the global coronavirus pandemic.
15 While the economy in Spain has been recovering since its 2012 banking bailout, that crisis also increased significantly the wealth gap across Spanish society.
16 The mounting misfortune has driven some to embrace a formerly unthinkable idea: a government bailout.
17 Five years ago it arrived with a vengeance, leaving every taxpayer thousands poorer after the bailouts and some individuals facing ruin – such as the Fletts.
18 I was very much looking forward to reading “Borrowed Time,” James Freeman and Vern McKinley’s book about “two centuries of booms, busts, and bailouts” at Citigroup, once the nation’s largest bank.
19 Thanks to bailouts from its big brother in Abu Dhabi, it isn't.
20 The obsession with the banks and the bailout is itself phrased in weirdly retro terms, the stuff of an invitation to a 2008-election theme party.
1 财政援助