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increase+prices

  • 1 rise

    [raɪz] past tense rose [rouz]: past participle risen [ˈrɪzn]
    1. verb
    1) to become greater, larger, higher etc; to increase:

    If the river rises much more, there will be a flood

    His spirits rose at the good news.

    يَرْتَفِع
    2) to move upwards:

    The curtain rose to reveal an empty stage.

    يَعْلو، يَرْتَفِع، يَتَصاعَد
    3) to get up from bed:

    He rises every morning at six o'clock.

    يَنْهَض
    4) to stand up:

    The children all rose when the headmaster came in.

    يَقِف
    5) (of the sun etc) to appear above the horizon:

    The sun rises in the east and sets in the west.

    تُشْرِق الشَّمْس
    6) to slope upwards:

    The ground rises at this point.

    يَرْتَفِع، يَعْلو
    7) to rebel:

    The people rose (up) in revolt against the dictator.

    يَثور
    8) to move to a higher rank, a more important position etc:

    He rose to the rank of colonel.

    يَتَرَقّى
    9) (of a river) to begin or appear:

    The Rhône rises in the Alps.

    يَظْهَر، يبدأ بالظُّهور
    10) (of wind) to begin; to become stronger:

    Don't go out in the boat – the wind has risen.

    تَهُبُّ الرّيح، تَعلو
    11) to be built:

    Office blocks are rising all over the town.

    يُبْنى، يَرْتَفِع
    12) to come back to life:

    Jesus has risen.

    يُبْعَثُ حَيّا
    2. noun
    1) (the) act of rising:

    a rise in prices.

    ارتِقاء، صُعود
    2) an increase in salary or wages:

    She asked her boss for a rise.

    زيادَه في الرّاتِب
    3) a slope or hill:

    The house is just beyond the next rise.

    مُنْحَدَر
    4) the beginning and early development of something:

    the rise of the Roman Empire.

    ظُهور، صُعود

    Arabic-English dictionary > rise

  • 2 spiral

    [ˈspaɪərəl]
    1. adjective
    1) coiled round like a spring, with each coil the same size as the one below:

    a spiral staircase.

    لَولَبي
    2) winding round and round, usually tapering to a point:

    a spiral shell.

    حَلَزوني
    2. noun
    1) an increase or decrease, or rise or fall, becoming more and more rapid (eg in prices).
    إرتِفاع تَصاعُدي للأسْعار
    2) a spiral line or object:

    A spiral of smoke rose from the chimney.

    مَسار حَلَزوني
    3. verb
    past tense, past participle ˈspiralled, (American) ˈspiraled
    to go or move in a spiral, especially to increase more and more rapidly:

    Prices have spiralled in the last six months.

    يَرْتَفِع أو يَتَصاعَد حَلَزونِيّا

    Arabic-English dictionary > spiral

  • 3 escalate

    [ˈeskəleɪt] verb
    to increase or enlarge rapidly:

    Prices are escalating.

    يُصَعِّد، يَزيد حِدَّة

    Arabic-English dictionary > escalate

  • 4 explosion

    [-ʒən] noun
    1) a blowing up, or the noise caused by this:

    The explosion could be heard a long way off.

    إنْفِجار، تَفْجير
    2) the action of exploding:

    the explosion of the atom bomb.

    إنْفِجار، تَفْجير

    an explosion of laughter.

    إنْفِجار (بالغَضَب)
    4) a sudden great increase:

    an explosion in food prices.

    إزْدياد ، زيادَه فُجائِيَّه

    Arabic-English dictionary > explosion

  • 5 inflation

    noun
    1) the process of inflating or being inflated.
    نَفْخ، إنْتِفاخ
    2) a situation in country's economy where prices and wages keep forcing each other to increase.
    تَضَخُّم

    Arabic-English dictionary > inflation

  • 6 rocket

    [ˈrɔkɪt]
    1. noun
    1) a tube containing materials which, when set on fire, give off a jet of gas which drives the tube forward, usually up into the air, used eg as a firework, for signalling, or for launching a spacecraft.
    صاروخ الألعاب النّاريَّه
    2) a spacecraft launched in this way:

    The Americans have sent a rocket to Mars.

    صاروخ فَضاء
    2. verb
    past tense, past participle ˈrocketed
    to rise or increase very quickly:

    Bread prices have rocketed.

    يَرْتَفِع كالصّاروخ

    Arabic-English dictionary > rocket

  • 7 shoot up

    to grow or increase rapidly:

    Prices have shot up.

    يَرْتَفِع

    Arabic-English dictionary > shoot up

  • 8 skyrocket

    I verb
    to rise sharply; to increase rapidly and suddenly:

    Housing prices have skyrocketed.

    يَرْتَفِع بِسُرْعَه II noun
    a rocket firework that explodes in brilliant colourful sparks.
    سَهْم ناري، صاروخ ألعاب ناريَّه

    Arabic-English dictionary > skyrocket

См. также в других словарях:

  • Prices of production — refers to a concept in Karl Marx s critique of political economy. It is introduced in the third volume of Das Kapital, where Marx considers the operation of capitalist production as the unity of a production process and a circulation process… …   Wikipedia

  • hike prices (to) —  Increase prices …   American business jargon

  • increase */*/*/ — I UK [ɪnˈkriːs] / US [ɪnˈkrɪs] verb Word forms increase : present tense I/you/we/they increase he/she/it increases present participle increasing past tense increased past participle increased Other ways of saying increase: be/go up to increase:… …   English dictionary

  • increase — ▪ I. increase in‧crease 2 [ˈɪŋkriːs] noun [countable, uncountable] 1. a rise in amount, number, or degree: increase in • There was an increase in delays of deliveries of supplies. increase be on the increase • Demand for low cost housing is on… …   Financial and business terms

  • increase — in|crease1 W1S2 [ınˈkri:s] v [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: encreistre, from Latin increscere, from crescere to grow ] [I and T] if you increase something, or if it increases, it becomes bigger in amount, number, or degree ≠ ↑decrease,… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • increase — 1 /In kri:s/ verb 1 (I) to become larger in amount, number, or degree: The population of London increased dramatically in the first half of the century. | The pain increased steadily until I could think of nothing else. | increase in… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • rise in prices — increase in costs …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Small but Significant and Non-transitory Increase in Price — In competition law, before deciding whether companies have significant market power which would justify government intervention, the test of Small but Significant and Non transitory Increase in Price is used to define the relevant market in a… …   Wikipedia

  • Natural gas prices — at the Henry Hub in US Dollars per MBtu for the 2000 2010 decade. Natural gas prices, as with other commodity prices, are mainly driven by supply and demand fundamentals. However, natural gas prices may also be linked to the price of crude oil… …   Wikipedia

  • Skyrocketing Food Prices: A Global Crisis — ▪ 2009 by Janet H. Clark       As the year 2008 got under way, upwardly spiraling food prices became of increasing concern to international organizations and relief agencies, national governments, and consumers everywhere. UN officials speculated …   Universalium

  • Edict on Maximum Prices — The Edict on Maximum Prices (also known as the Edict on Prices or the Edict of Diocletian; in Latin Edictum De Pretiis Rerum Venalium ) was issued in 301 by Roman Emperor Diocletian. During the Crisis of the Third Century, Roman coinage had been… …   Wikipedia

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