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1 steady decline
Англо-русский словарь нормативно-технической терминологии > steady decline
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2 steady decline
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3 steady decline
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > steady decline
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4 steady decline
неуклонное снижениеАнгло-русский словарь экономических терминов > steady decline
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5 steady decline
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6 steady decline
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7 steady decline
מגמת ירידה (ירידה הדרגתית ומתמשכת, נטייה הולכת ופוחתת)* * *◙ (תתחופו תכלוה הייטנ,תכשמתמו תיתגרדה הדירי) הדירי תמגמ◄ -
8 steady decline
неуклонное падение, неуклонное снижение, неуклонное ухудшение -
9 steady decline
langzame daling (langzame en duurzame afdaling) -
10 steady decline
неуклонное снижениеEnglish-Russian dictionary of technical terms > steady decline
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11 steady decline
English-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > steady decline
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12 steady decline
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13 steady decline in income
Politics english-russian dictionary > steady decline in income
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14 (a) steady decline in industry
English-Russian combinatory dictionary > (a) steady decline in industry
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15 steady
['stedɪ]adj1) устойчивый, нешатающийся, твёрдый, крепкийHe made the table steady with a piece of cardboard. — Он укрепил стол, подложив кусок картона.
The job needs steady hands (nerves). — Для этой работы нужна твердая рука (крепкие нервы).
- steady table- steady ladder
- steady platform
- steady foundation
- steady support
- steady hand
- steady nerves
- be not steady on one's legs
- hold the candle steady
- make smth steady
- make the table steady2) постоянный, неуклонный- steady growth in industry- steady improvement in industry
- steady decline in industry
- steady control
- steady prices
- steady rise
- steady man
- steady friend
- steady light
- steady image
- steady in one's purpose
- steady in its progress
- be steady in one's habits
- get steady encouragement
- have a steady job
- keep up a steady speed
- live a steady life
- meet with a steady opposition
- steady east wind is blowing
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16 decline
1. n1) падение; спад; депрессия2) понижение, снижение; сокращение3) ухудшение
- business decline
- industrial decline
- inventory price decline
- population decline
- the pound's decline
- price decline
- seasonal decline
- slight decline
- steady decline
- steep decline
- stock market decline
- technical decline
- decline in birth rate
- decline in business activity
- decline in buying power
- decline in capacities
- decline in demand
- decline in earnings
- decline in economic activity
- decline in efficiency
- decline in exports
- decline in output
- decline in performance
- decline in prices
- decline in production
- decline in productivity
- decline in quotations
- decline in rate
- decline in real wages
- decline in reserves
- decline in value
- suffer a decline2. v1) падать; понижаться, снижаться2) приходить в упадок; ухудшаться3) отклонять; отказыватьсяEnglish-russian dctionary of contemporary Economics > decline
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17 decline
1. nпадение; снижение; понижение; упадок; спад; ухудшениеto be in decline — находиться в упадке; переживать упадок / кризис
to be on the decline — клониться к упадку; уменьшаться; сокращаться
- decline in jobsto offset price declines — компенсировать падение / снижение цен
- decline in the dollar
- decline in the living standard
- decline of art
- decline of export markets
- further decline of the dollar
- general decline
- irreversible decline in economic activity
- precipitous decline
- price decline
- real wages decline
- steady decline 2. v1) отклонять, отвергать; отказываться2) падать; снижаться; сокращаться; идти на убыль; приходить в упадок; ухудшаться•to decline a debate — отказываться от участия в дискуссии / прениях
to decline drastically — резко сокращаться (об экспорте, импорте и т.п.)
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18 decline
1. n1) падение, упадок; спад; истощение2) падение, снижение (цен); спад, понижение•2. v1) отклонять, отвергать, отказываться2) приходить в упадок; уменьшаться, идти на убыль -
19 decline
снижение; спад; падение; убыль; уклон; отклонение -
20 steady
steady [ˈstedɪ]1. adjectivea. [supply, rain, breathing, demand, income] régulier ; [prices, sales, market] stable• to keep sth steady [+ prices, demand] stabiliser qchb. ( = composed) [voice] ferme ; [nerves] solide ; [gaze] ( = unflinching) calme ; ( = intimidating) insistantd. ( = dependable) [person] sérieux2. exclamation[+ wobbling object] stabiliser ; [+ chair, table] (with hand) maintenir ; ( = wedge) caler ; [+ nervous person, horse] calmer• to steady o.s. se remettre d'aplomb• to have a steadying effect on sb ( = make less nervous) calmer qn ; ( = make less wild) assagir qn( = regain balance) se remettre d'aplomb ; ( = grow less nervous) se calmer ; ( = grow less wild) s'assagir ; [prices, market] se stabiliser* * *['stedɪ] 1.1) ( continual) [stream, increase, decline] constant; [rain] incessant; [breathing, drip, speed, progress] régulier/-ière2) ( unwavering) [hand] ferme; fig [faith] immuable3) ( stable) stableto keep ou hold something steady — bien tenir quelque chose
he isn't very steady on his feet — ( from age) il n'est plus très ferme sur ses jambes; ( from drunkenness) il titube
to hold steady — [interest rates] se maintenir
4) ( calm) [voice] ferme; [gaze] calme5) ( reliable) [job] fixe; [relationship] durable; [worker] fiable2.(colloq) exclamation GB3.steady! ou steady on! — ( reprovingly) doucement!
transitive verb1) ( stop moving) tenir [camera]2) ( control)4.intransitive verb lit, fig se stabiliser5.to steady oneself — ( physically) rétablir son équilibre; ( mentally) se calmer
••to go steady with somebody — (colloq) sortir avec quelqu'un
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См. также в других словарях:
steady decline — gradual decrease that takes time, tendency to decrease … English contemporary dictionary
Decline of the Roman Empire — This article is about the historiography of the decline of the Roman Empire. For a description of events, see Roman Empire. For the book by Edward Gibbon, see The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. For the film, see The Fall of… … Wikipedia
steady — ▪ I. steady steady 2 verb steadied PTandPP [intransitive, transitive] to stop increasing or decreasing and stay about the same, or to make something do this: • The dollar has steadied after early losses on the money markets. • Some cautious… … Financial and business terms
decline — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ catastrophic, considerable, dramatic, drastic, large, major, marked, massive, serious, severe … Collocations dictionary
steady — 1 adjective 1 NOT MOVING firmly held in a particular position and not moving or shaking: Keep the camera steady while you take a picture. | a steady hand: You need a steady hand for such a delicate job. 2 CONTINUOUS moving, happening, or… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
decline — de|cline1 [ dı klaın ] verb *** 1. ) intransitive to become less or worse: The number of people buying their own homes has declined. In many cases living standards are declining. decline steadily/sharply/rapidly/dramatically: Stock prices… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
decline */*/*/ — I UK [dɪˈklaɪn] / US verb Word forms decline : present tense I/you/we/they decline he/she/it declines present participle declining past tense declined past participle declined 1) [intransitive] to become less or worse The number of people buying… … English dictionary
decline — 01. The [decline] in the New York stock market is due to the financial crisis in Asia. 02. The value of the yen on international markets has [declined] significantly over the past year. 03. He asked her to the dance, but she [declined] his… … Grammatical examples in English
decline*/*/ — [dɪˈklaɪn] verb I 1) [I] to become less or worse The number of people buying their own homes has declined.[/ex] Share prices declined sharply last week.[/ex] 2) [I/T] to say politely that you will not accept something or do something They offered … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
Decline — De*cline , n. [F. d[ e]clin. See {Decline}, v. i.] 1. A falling off; a tendency to a worse state; diminution or decay; deterioration; also, the period when a thing is tending toward extinction or a less perfect state; as, the decline of life; the … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
decline — I n. 1) to go into, suffer a decline 2) a gradual; sharp; steady; steep decline 3) a decline in (a decline in trade) 4) on the decline II v. (E) she declined to address the delegates * * * [dɪ klaɪn] sharp steady … Combinatory dictionary