-
41 family business
Gen Mgta small or medium-sized business, run by a family owner, often with the help of other family members, and passed on within the family. If a family business grows, it may be run as an unregistered partnership or, more commonly, registered as a limited company, although in both cases the partners or the directors will be appointed from within the family to retain family control. In the case of larger, public limited family businesses, family members are usually majority shareholders and retain control of the board of directors, although nonfamily directors and shareholders will have an influence on the way the company is run. The most common cause of business failure in family-owned businesses is poor succession planning. -
42 economic failure
фин. экономическая несостоятельность (ситуация, когда доходы фирмы не покрывают всех ее расходов, включая расходы на обслуживание источников финансирования; такие фирмы могут продолжать функционировать, если собственники и инвесторы согласны предоставлять компании дополнительное финансирование, рассчитывая, что компания сможет стабилизировать свою деятельность и начнет приносить доход)See: -
43 component failure impact analysis
анализ влияния сбоя компонентов
CFIA
(ITIL Service Design)
Техника, которая помогает определить влияние сбоя в работе конфигурационной единицы на ИТ-услуги и бизнес. Создание матрицы с ИТ-услугами по одному направлению и КЕ по другому, позволяет выявить критичные КЕ (которые могут быть причиной сбоя в предоставлении множества ИТ-услуг) и уязвимые ИТ-услуги (которые имеют множество единых точек отказа).
[Словарь терминов ITIL версия 1.0, 29 июля 2011 г.]EN
component failure impact analysis
CFIA
(ITIL Service Design)
A technique that helps to identify the impact of configuration item failure on IT services and the business. A matrix is created with IT services on one axis and CIs on the other. This enables the identification of critical CIs (that could cause the failure of multiple IT services) and fragile IT services (that have multiple single points of failure).
[Словарь терминов ITIL версия 1.0, 29 июля 2011 г.]Тематики
Синонимы
EN
Англо-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > component failure impact analysis
-
44 неудачный сделка
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > неудачный сделка
-
45 crash
kræʃ
1. noun1) (a noise as of heavy things breaking or falling on something hard: I heard a crash, and looked round to see that he'd dropped all the plates.) estruendo, estrépito2) (a collision: There was a crash involving three cars.) colisión, choque, encontronazo3) (a failure of a business etc: the Wall Street crash.) quiebra4) (a sudden failure of a computer: A computer crash is very costly.)
2. verb1) (to (cause to) fall with a loud noise: The glass crashed to the floor.) caer con estrépito, estrellar(se)2) (to drive or be driven violently (against, into): He crashed (his car); His car crashed into a wall.) chocar contra, estrellar, colisionar3) ((of aircraft) to land or be landed in such a way as to be damaged or destroyed: His plane crashed in the mountains.) estrellar(se)4) ((of a business) to fail.) quebrar, fracasar5) (to force one's way noisily (through, into): He crashed through the undergrowth.) abrirse camino/paso6) ((of a computer) to stop working suddenly: If the computer crashes, we may lose all our files.)
3. adjective(rapid and concentrated: a crash course in computer technology.) acelerado, intensivo- crash-land
crash1 n1. accidente2. estrépitocrash2 vb1. estrellarse / chocar2. tener un accidentetr[kræʃ]1 (noise) estrépito; (of thunder) trueno, estallido3 SMALLCOMMERCE/SMALL (collapse) quiebra1 (make loud noise) retumbar2 (fall noisily) chocar4 SMALLCOMMERCE/SMALL quebrar5 SMALLCOMPUTING/SMALL fallar6 familiar (stay the night) quedarse a dormir1 (smash - car) estrellar ( into, contra)2 (make noise) hacer ruido con; (drop noisily) dejar caer estrepitosamente\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLcrash! ¡cataplum!car crash accidente nombre masculino de cochecrash barrier barrera de proteccióncrash course curso intensivocrash diet régimen nombre masculino muy estrictocrash helmet casco, casco protectorcrash ['kræʃ] vi1) smash: caerse con estrépito, estrellarse2) collide: estrellarse, chocar3) boom, resound: retumbar, resonarcrash vt1) smash: estrellar2)to crash one's car : tener un accidentecrash n1) din: estrépito m2) collision: choque m, colisión fcar crash: accidente automovilístico3) failure: quiebra f (de un negocio), crac m (de la bolsa)n.• crac s.m. (Computing)n.• fallo (Informática) s.m.n.• accidente s.m.• caída (Sistema informático) s.f.• choque s.m.• colisión s.f.• encontrón s.m.• estallido s.m.• estampida s.f.• estampido s.m.• estrellón s.m.• estropicio s.m.• estruendo s.m.• estrépito s.m.v.• chocar v.• estrellar v.• hundir v.• quebrar v.• romper v.
I kræʃa) ( loud noise) estrépito mb) (collision, accident) accidente m, choque mplane/car crash — accidente aéreo/de automóvil
c) ( financial failure) crac m, crack m
II
1.
1) ( smash)he crashed the car — tuvo un accidente con el coche, chocó
2) (colloq)to crash a party — colarse* en una fiesta (fam)
2.
vi1)a) ( collide)to crash (INTO something) — estrellarse or chocar* (contra algo)
b) ( make loud noise) \<\<thunder\>\> retumbarc) ( Fin) \<\<shares\>\> caer* a pique, colapsar2) ( spend the night) (esp AmE colloq) quedarse a dormir3) ( Comput) fallar•Phrasal Verbs:
III
adjective (before n) <program/course> intensivo[kræʃ]crash diet — régimen m muy estricto
1. N1) (=noise) estrépito m ; (=thunder) estruendo m ; (=explosion) estallido m2) (=accident) (Aut) choque m ; (Aer) accidente mto have a crash — (Aut) tener un accidente de coche, chocar con el coche
to be in a car/plane crash — tener un accidente de coche/aviación
3) (Econ) [of stock exchange] crac m ; [of business] (=failure) quiebra f2. VT2) * (=gatecrash)3. VI1) (=fall noisily) caer con estrépito; (=move noisily) moverse de manera ruidosa2) (=have accident) tener un accidente; (Aer) estrellarse, caer a tierra; (=collide) [two vehicles] chocarto crash into/through — chocar or estrellarse contra
3) (Econ) [business] quebrar; [stock exchange] sufrir una crisis4) (Comput) bloquearse, colgarse (Sp)5) ** (=sleep) dormir, pasar la noche4.ADV5.EXCL ¡zas!, ¡pum!6.CPD [diet etc] intensivo, aceleradocrash barrier N — (Brit) (Aut) quitamiedos m inv ; (at stadium etc) valla f protectora
crash course N — curso m intensivo or acelerado
crash dive N — [of submarine] inmersión f de emergencia
crash helmet N — casco m protector
crash landing N — aterrizaje m forzoso or de emergencia
crash programme (Brit), crash program (US) N — programa m de urgencia
crash site N — [of plane, car] lugar m del siniestro, lugar m del accidente
* * *
I [kræʃ]a) ( loud noise) estrépito mb) (collision, accident) accidente m, choque mplane/car crash — accidente aéreo/de automóvil
c) ( financial failure) crac m, crack m
II
1.
1) ( smash)he crashed the car — tuvo un accidente con el coche, chocó
2) (colloq)to crash a party — colarse* en una fiesta (fam)
2.
vi1)a) ( collide)to crash (INTO something) — estrellarse or chocar* (contra algo)
b) ( make loud noise) \<\<thunder\>\> retumbarc) ( Fin) \<\<shares\>\> caer* a pique, colapsar2) ( spend the night) (esp AmE colloq) quedarse a dormir3) ( Comput) fallar•Phrasal Verbs:
III
adjective (before n) <program/course> intensivocrash diet — régimen m muy estricto
-
46 failed
прил.1) общ. неудачный; неудавшийся2) эк. обанкротившийся; несостоятельныйSee:3) общ. неисправный; поврежденный -
47 financial distress
фин. бедственное финансовое положение, финансовые затруднения (финансовое состояние, угрожающее наступлением банкротства; напр., неспособность погашать текущие обязательства, а также сама ситуация банкротства)See:financial distress cost, economic failure, business failure, technical insolvency, insolvency in bankruptcy, legal bankruptcy, bankruptcy, financial position, bankruptcy prediction* * ** * *. События, предваряющие и включающие в себя банкротство, например, нарушение кредитных соглашений . Инвестиционная деятельность . -
48 insolvency in bankruptcy
фин. неплатежеспособность в преддверии банкротства* (ситуация, когда общий учетный размер обязательств фирмы превышает реальную рыночную стоимость ее активов, но фирма еще не находится в процессе банкротства)See:Англо-русский экономический словарь > insolvency in bankruptcy
-
49 shutdown of production
Opsthe action of stopping production due to a lack of resources or components, equipment failure or installation, or industrial action by workers. Shutdown of production may also be instigated by management to reduce output. A shutdown can be a temporary measure, for example, in holiday periods, but it can also be permanent, for example, when a manufacturing company closes down after business failure. -
50 turnaround management
Gen Mgtthe implementation of a set of actions required to save an organization from business failure and return it to operational normality and financial solvency. Turnaround management usually requires strong leadership and can include corporate restructuring and redundancies, an investigation of the root causes of failure, and long-term programs to revitalize the organization. -
51 Dun & Bradstreet
орг.тж. Dun and Bradstreet сокр. D&Bфин., амер. "Дан энд Брэдстрит" (американская компания, собирающая, продающая и публикующая финансовую и коммерческую информацию о крупнейших корпорациях США, а также устанавливающая кредитные рейтинги; создана в 1841 г., владеет рейтинговым агентством "Мудиз"; в течение длительного времени собирала и публиковала статистику о банкротствах коммерческих предприятий)See:
* * *
D&B Dun & Bradstreet "Дан энд Брэдстрит" (США): компания (торговое агентство), собирающая информацию о корпорациях в стране (основана в 1841 г.); продает и публикует финансовую и коммерческую информацию, кредитные рейтинги; владеет рейтинговым агентством "Мудиз"; см. mercantile agency;* * *. . Словарь экономических терминов . -
52 debt rescheduling
Gen Mgtthe renegotiation of debt repayments. Debt rescheduling is necessary when a company can no longer meet its debt payments. It can involve deferring debt payments, deferring payment of interest, or negotiating a new loan. It is usually undertaken as part of turnaround management to avoid business failure. Debt rescheduling is also undertaken in less developed countries that encounter national debt difficulties. Such arrangements are usually overseen by the International Monetary Fund. -
53 insolvency
Fin, Gen Mgtthe inability to pay debts when they become due. Insolvency will apply even if total assets exceed total liabilities, if those assets cannot be readily converted into cash to meet debts as they mature. Even then, insolvency may not necessarily mean business failure. Bankruptcy may be avoided through debt rescheduling or turnaround management. -
54 interim management
(U.K.) Gen Mgtthe temporary employment of an experienced manager by an organization seeking to fill a temporary vacancy or coordinate a particular project. Interim managers are generally used to bring in skills not already present in an organization. Sometimes they are employed when an organization is facing business failure, but increasingly they are used as a strategic resource as and when required. Interim managers work on a freelance or portfolio working basis. Interim managers differ from both temporary staff and consultants. In general, they are considerably senior to most other temporary workers, and fulfill assignments—often long term—that drive the future of the employing company. They also provide hands-on, day-to-day expertise, in contrast to the prescriptive, advisory support that management consultants deliver. -
55 order book
Opsa record of the outstanding orders that an organization has received. An order book may be physical, with the specifications and delivery times of orders recorded in it, or the term may be used generally to describe the health of a company. A full order book implies a successful company, while an empty order book can indicate an organization at risk of business failure. -
56 top-down approach
Gen Mgtan autocratic style of leadership in which strategies and solutions are identified by senior management and then cascaded down through the organization. The top-down approach can be considered a feature of large bureaucracies and is associated with a command and control approach to management. A number of management gurus, particularly Gary Hamel, have criticized it as an out-of-date style that leads to stagnation and business failure. It is the opposite of a bottom-up approach. -
57 crash
[kræʃ] 1. noun1) (a noise as of heavy things breaking or falling on something hard: I heard a crash, and looked round to see that he'd dropped all the plates.) brag2) (a collision: There was a crash involving three cars.) sammenstød; kollision3) (a failure of a business etc: the Wall Street crash.) krak4) (a sudden failure of a computer: A computer crash is very costly.)2. verb1) (to (cause to) fall with a loud noise: The glass crashed to the floor.) smadre; styrte; brage2) (to drive or be driven violently (against, into): He crashed (his car); His car crashed into a wall.) støde ind; smadre3) ((of aircraft) to land or be landed in such a way as to be damaged or destroyed: His plane crashed in the mountains.) styrte ned4) ((of a business) to fail.) krakke5) (to force one's way noisily (through, into): He crashed through the undergrowth.) brage; styrte6) ((of a computer) to stop working suddenly: If the computer crashes, we may lose all our files.)3. adjective(rapid and concentrated: a crash course in computer technology.) lyn-- crash-land* * *[kræʃ] 1. noun1) (a noise as of heavy things breaking or falling on something hard: I heard a crash, and looked round to see that he'd dropped all the plates.) brag2) (a collision: There was a crash involving three cars.) sammenstød; kollision3) (a failure of a business etc: the Wall Street crash.) krak4) (a sudden failure of a computer: A computer crash is very costly.)2. verb1) (to (cause to) fall with a loud noise: The glass crashed to the floor.) smadre; styrte; brage2) (to drive or be driven violently (against, into): He crashed (his car); His car crashed into a wall.) støde ind; smadre3) ((of aircraft) to land or be landed in such a way as to be damaged or destroyed: His plane crashed in the mountains.) styrte ned4) ((of a business) to fail.) krakke5) (to force one's way noisily (through, into): He crashed through the undergrowth.) brage; styrte6) ((of a computer) to stop working suddenly: If the computer crashes, we may lose all our files.)3. adjective(rapid and concentrated: a crash course in computer technology.) lyn-- crash-land -
58 collapse
kə'læps1) (to fall down and break into pieces: The bridge collapsed under the weight of the traffic.) derrumbarse2) ((of a person) to fall down especially unconscious, because of illness, shock etc: She collapsed with a heart attack.) sufrir un colapso3) (to break down, fail: The talks between the two countries have collapsed.) fracasar4) (to fold up or to (cause to) come to pieces (intentionally): Do these chairs collapse?) plegarse•collapse vb1. derrumbarse / hundirse / venirse abajo2. desplomarsetr[kə'læps]1 (falling down) derrumbamiento; (falling in) hundimiento2 (failure, breakdown) fracaso3 (prices, currency) caída en picado; (business, company) quiebra4 SMALLMEDICINE/SMALL colapso1 (building, bridge, etc) derrumbarse, desplomarse; (roof) hundirse, venirse abajo; (tired person) desplomarse2 SMALLMEDICINE/SMALL (person) sufrir un colapso3 (fail - project, talks, etc) fracasar, venirse abajo; (- hopes) desvanecerse4 (prices, currency) caer en picado; (business, company) quebrar, ir a la bancarrota5 (chair, table) plegarse1 (table) plegar\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto collapse with laughter desternillarse de risacollapsed lung colapso pulmonar1) : derrumbarse, desplomarse, hundirsethe building collapsed: el edificio se derrumbó2) fall: desplomarse, caersehe collapsed on the bed: se desplomó en la camato collapse with laughter: morirse de risa3) fail: fracasar, quebrar, arruinarse4) fold: plegarsecollapse n1) fall: derrumbe m, desplome m2) breakdown, failure: fracaso m, colapso m (físico), quiebra f (económica)n.• caída s.f.• colapso s.m.• derrumbamiento s.m.• despeño s.m.• desplome s.m.• fracaso s.m.• hundimiento s.m.v.• aplanarse v.• aplomarse v.• derrumbarse v.• desmayarse v.• desplomar v.• hundir v.• plegar v.
I kə'læps1) ( fall down) \<\<building\>\> derrumbarse, desmoronarse, desplomarse2)a) ( fall) \<\<person\>\> desplomarseb) ( Med) \<\<person\>\> sufrir un colapso3) ( fail) fracasar, venirse* abajo4)a) ( fold up) \<\<table/chair\>\> plegarse*b) collapsing pres p <table/chair> plegable
II
count & mass nouna) ( of building) derrumbe m, desmoronamiento mb) ( Med) colapso mc) ( of plan) fracaso m; ( of company) quiebra f[kǝ'læps]1.N (Med) colapso m ; [of building, roof, floor] hundimiento m, desplome m ; [of government] caída f ; [of plans, scheme] fracaso m ; (financial) ruina f ; [of civilization, society] ocaso m ; (Comm) [of business] quiebra f ; [of prices] hundimiento m, caída f2. VI1) [person] (Med) sufrir un colapso; (with laughter) morirse (de risa); [building, roof, floor] hundirse, desplomarse; [civilization, society] desaparecer, extinguirse; [government] caer; [scheme] fracasar; [business] quebrar; [prices] hundirse, bajar repentinamentethe company collapsed — la compañía quebró or se hundió
2) (=fold down) plegarse, doblarse* * *
I [kə'læps]1) ( fall down) \<\<building\>\> derrumbarse, desmoronarse, desplomarse2)a) ( fall) \<\<person\>\> desplomarseb) ( Med) \<\<person\>\> sufrir un colapso3) ( fail) fracasar, venirse* abajo4)a) ( fold up) \<\<table/chair\>\> plegarse*b) collapsing pres p <table/chair> plegable
II
count & mass nouna) ( of building) derrumbe m, desmoronamiento mb) ( Med) colapso mc) ( of plan) fracaso m; ( of company) quiebra f -
59 crash
1. noun1) (noise) Krachen, dasfall with a crash — mit einem lauten Krach fallen
2) (collision) Zusammenstoß, derplane/train crash — Flugzeug- / Eisenbahnunglück, das
2. intransitive verbin a [car] crash — bei einem [Auto]unfall
1) (make a noise, go noisily) krachen2) (have a collision) einen Unfall haben; [Flugzeug, Flieger:] abstürzen3. transitive verb1) (smash) schmettern2) (cause to have collision) einen Unfall haben mit* * *[kræʃ] 1. noun1) (a noise as of heavy things breaking or falling on something hard: I heard a crash, and looked round to see that he'd dropped all the plates.) das Krachen2) (a collision: There was a crash involving three cars.) der Zusammenstoß3) (a failure of a business etc: the Wall Street crash.) der Zusammenbruch4) (a sudden failure of a computer: A computer crash is very costly.)2. verb2) (to drive or be driven violently (against, into): He crashed (his car); His car crashed into a wall.) (zusammen-)stoßen3) ((of aircraft) to land or be landed in such a way as to be damaged or destroyed: His plane crashed in the mountains.) abstürzen4) ((of a business) to fail.) zusammenbrechen5) (to force one's way noisily (through, into): He crashed through the undergrowth.) stürzen, poltern3. adjective(rapid and concentrated: a crash course in computer technology.) Intensiv-...- academic.ru/115771/crash-helmet">crash-helmet- crash-land* * *[kræʃ]I. n<pl -es>car \crash Autounfall mplane \crash Flugzeugabsturz m▪ with a \crash mit Getösestock market \crash Börsenkrach mcomputer \crash Computerabsturz mII. vito \crash on landing/take-off beim Landen/Starten abstürzen2. (hit)3. (collide with)▪ to \crash into sb/sth mit etw/jdm zusammenstoßento \crash head-on frontal zusammenstoßenthe dog \crashed [or came \crashing] through the bushes der Hund preschte durch die Büschethe car \crashed through the roadblock das Auto krachte durch die Straßensperreto \crash [or come \crashing] to the ground auf den Boden knallenthe vase \crashed to the ground die Vase zerschellte am Boden5. COMM, STOCKEX (collapse) stockmarket zusammenbrechen; company Pleite machen fam, in Konkurs gehenIII. vt1. (damage in accident)▪ to \crash sth etw zu Bruch fahrento \crash a plane eine Bruchlandung machen2. (make noise)▪ to \crash sth etw schmettern [o knallen]she \crashed the vase against the wall sie knallte die Vase gegen die Wandto \crash a party uneingeladen zu einer Party kommen* * *[krʃ]1. nthere was a crash upstairs — es hat oben gekracht
the crash of the waves against... — das Krachen der Wellen gegen...
2) (= accident) Unfall m, Unglück nt; (= collision also) Zusammenstoß m; (with several cars) Karambolage f; (= plane crash) (Flugzeug)unglück ntto have a crash — (mit dem Auto) verunglücken, einen (Auto)unfall haben
the impact of the crash (into another car) — die Wucht des Aufpralls die Wucht des Zusammenstoßes
2. advkrachhe went crash into a tree — er krachte gegen einen Baum
3. vt1) car, bicycle einen Unfall haben mit; plane abstürzen mitif you let him use your car he's bound to crash it — wenn du ihm dein Auto gibst, fährt er es dir bestimmt kaputt (inf)
to crash one's car into sth — mit dem Auto gegen etw krachen or knallen
2)he crashed the cymbals together —
3) (inf= gatecrash)
to crash a party — uneingeladen zu einer Party gehen, in eine Party hineinplatzen4. vi1) (= have an accident) verunglücken, einen Unfall haben; (plane, computer) abstürzento crash into sth — gegen etw (acc) krachen or knallen (inf)
to crash to the ground/through sth — zu Boden/durch etw krachen
they went crashing through the undergrowth —
his fist crashed into Tom's face — seine Faust landete krachend in Toms Gesicht
when Wall Street crashed — als Wall Street zusammenbrach, beim Börsenkrach der Wall Street
4) (inf) (= sleep) knacken (sl); (= fall asleep) einknacken (sl); (= become unconscious) zusammenklappen (inf)* * *crash1 [kræʃ]A v/t1. zertrümmern, -schmettern2. sich krachend einen Weg bahnen4. a) einen Unfall haben mit:crash one’s car into a wall mit dem Auto gegen eine Mauer krachenb) FLUG abstürzen mit5. umg uneingeladen kommen zu, hineinplatzen in (akk):6. fig umg einen Einbruch erzielen in (akk), etwas schaffen:crash the headlines Schlagzeilen machenB v/i1. (krachend) zerbersten, zerbrechen, zerschmettert werden2. krachend einstürzen, zusammenkrachen umg:his whole world came crashing about his ears für ihn brach eine Welt zusammen4. krachen (against, into gegen):crash down herunterkrachen;crash open krachend auffliegen (Tür)5. stürmen, platzen umg:crash in(to the room) hereinplatzen;crash in on a party in eine Party hineinplatzen6. AUTO zusammenstoßen, verunglücken7. FLUGa) abstürzen (auch Computer)he crashed at friends’C s1. Krach(en) m(n)2. Unfall m, Zusammenstoß m, (besonders Autorennen) Crash m4. FLUG Crash m:a) Absturz m (auch von Computer):be killed in a crash bei einem Absturz ums Leben kommenb) Bruchlandung f5. pl RADIO Krachgeräusche pl, atmosphärische Störungen plD adj Schnell…, Sofort…:crash course Schnell-, Intensivkurs m;crash program(me) Sofortprogramm nE int krach!crash2 [kræʃ] s grober Leinendrell* * *1. noun1) (noise) Krachen, das2) (collision) Zusammenstoß, derplane/train crash — Flugzeug- / Eisenbahnunglück, das
in a [car] crash — bei einem [Auto]unfall
3) (Finance etc.) Zusammenbruch, der2. intransitive verb1) (make a noise, go noisily) krachen2) (have a collision) einen Unfall haben; [Flugzeug, Flieger:] abstürzen3) (Finance etc., Computing) zusammenbrechen3. transitive verb1) (smash) schmettern2) (cause to have collision) einen Unfall haben mit* * *n.Absturz -¨e m.Krach ¨-e m.Zusammenbruch m.Zusammenstoß m. v.abstürzen v.krachen v.zerschmettern v. -
60 rate
I 1. [reɪt]1) (speed) ritmo m., velocità f.at a terrific rate — [ drive] a tutta velocità; [ work] a ritmo indiavolato
at this rate we'll never be able to afford a car — fig. di questo passo non potremo mai permetterci un'auto
2) (number of occurrences) tasso m., percentuale f.the failure rate is 4% — la percentuale dei bocciati è del 4%
3) (level)5) econ. (in foreign exchange) corso m.2.business rates — = imposta sugli immobili adibiti a uso commerciale e/o industriale
••II 1. [reɪt]at any rate — in ogni caso, a ogni modo
1) (classify)to rate sb. as a great composer — considerare qcn. un grande compositore
to rate sb. among the best pianists — annoverare qcn. tra i migliori pianisti
2) (deserve) meritare [medal, round of applause]3) (value) ammirare, stimare [person, honesty]; tenere in grande considerazione [ friendship]2. 3.* * *[reit] 1. noun1) (the number of occasions within a given period of time when something happens or is done: a high (monthly) accident rate in a factory.) tasso, percentuale2) (the number or amount of something (in relation to something else); a ratio: There was a failure rate of one pupil in ten in the exam.) percentuale3) (the speed with which something happens or is done: He works at a tremendous rate; the rate of increase/expansion.) ritmo, velocità4) (the level (of pay), cost etc (of or for something): What is the rate of pay for this job?) tariffa5) ((usually in plural) a tax, especially, in United Kingdom, paid by house-owners etc to help with the running of their town etc.) (imposta locale)2. verb(to estimate or be estimated, with regard to worth, merit, value etc: I don't rate this book very highly; He doesn't rate very highly as a dramatist in my estimation.) valutare, giudicare- rating- at this
- at that rate
- rate of exchange* * *I 1. [reɪt]1) (speed) ritmo m., velocità f.at a terrific rate — [ drive] a tutta velocità; [ work] a ritmo indiavolato
at this rate we'll never be able to afford a car — fig. di questo passo non potremo mai permetterci un'auto
2) (number of occurrences) tasso m., percentuale f.the failure rate is 4% — la percentuale dei bocciati è del 4%
3) (level)5) econ. (in foreign exchange) corso m.2.business rates — = imposta sugli immobili adibiti a uso commerciale e/o industriale
••II 1. [reɪt]at any rate — in ogni caso, a ogni modo
1) (classify)to rate sb. as a great composer — considerare qcn. un grande compositore
to rate sb. among the best pianists — annoverare qcn. tra i migliori pianisti
2) (deserve) meritare [medal, round of applause]3) (value) ammirare, stimare [person, honesty]; tenere in grande considerazione [ friendship]2. 3.
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