-
1 yield
ji:ld 1. verb1) (to give up; to surrender: He yielded to the other man's arguments; He yielded all his possessions to the state.) bøye av, gi etter, gi seg; overgi2) (to give way to force or pressure: At last the door yielded.) gi etter3) (to produce naturally, grow etc: How much milk does that herd of cattle yield?) kaste av seg, yte2. noun(the amount produced by natural means: the annual yield of wheat.) avkastning, ytelseavkastning--------utbytteIsubst. \/jiːld\/1) ( økonomi og generelt) avkastning, utbytte, beholdning, gevinst, produksjon, rente2) ( landbruk) høst, avkastning, ytelse3) flytningIIverb \/jiːld\/1) gi, gi avkastning, innbringe2) føre til, produsere, frembringe3) gi fra seg, gi opp, overlate, utlevere, avstå (fra), overgi4) ( mest litterært) gi, skjenke, bevilge, tilkjenne• she yielded me a son!5) ( gammeldags) lønne• God yield you!6) gi etter, vike, gi seg, bøye seg, fjære7) underkaste seg, trekke seg unna, gi etter, gi seg over, gi opp, dukke under, kapitulereyield ground bøye av, vikeyield obedience to være lydig mot noen, underkaste seg noenyield oneself prisoner gi seg til fange, overgi segyield oneself up overgi seg, underkaste seg hengi segyield precedence to la gå foranyield someone right of way gi forkjørsrett til noenyield the floor to someone ( parlamentarisk) overlate ordet til noenyield the point ( litterært) gi etter på et punkt, skifte standpunktyield to gi etter for, vike for, føye seg etterkapitulere for, falle for, gi etter for, gi tapt forbifalle, etterkommevære underlegen, ligge under, stå tilbake forbli overvunnet gjennom, bli kurert vedoverlevere til, utlevere til, overgi tilyield to it føye segyield to temptation falle for fristelsenyield up gi, innbringe åpenbare, avsløreyield (up) the ghost\/spirit ( gammeldags eller spøkefullt) oppgi ånden, trekke sitt siste sukkyield well gi god avkastning, bære bra -
2 produce
1. prə'dju:s verb1) (to bring out: She produced a letter from her pocket.) frambringe, framvise2) (to give birth to: A cow produces one or two calves a year.) føde, frambringe3) (to cause: His joke produced a shriek of laughter from the children.) forårsake, avstedkomme4) (to make or manufacture: The factory produces furniture.) lage, produsere5) (to give or yield: The country produces enough food for the population.) avle, produsere6) (to arrange and prepare (a theatre performance, film, television programme etc): The play was produced by Henry Dobson.) iscenesette, oppføre, produsere2. 'prodju:s noun(something that is produced, especially crops, eggs, milk etc from farms: agricultural/farm produce.) landbruksvarer, ferskvarer- producer- product
- production
- productive
- productivitylage--------produsereIsubst. \/ˈprɒdjuːs\/1) produkter, produksjon (av jordbruk e.l.)2) avling, avkastning3) produksjon(smengde)IIverb \/prəˈdjuːs\/1) produsere, fremstille, tilvirke2) skape3) avle, frembringe4) gi, bære, yte5) avkaste, kaste av, gi avkastning, produsere6) forårsake, avstedkomme, bevirke, vekke, fremkalle7) ta frem\/opp, trekke frem\/opp, dra frem\/opp, plukke frem\/opp, få frem\/opp8) (frem)skaffe, prestere, finne frem9) legge eller vise frem, fremvise, fremlegge, foreviseproduce young ( om dyr) få unger
См. также в других словарях:
yield´er — yield «yeeld», verb, noun. –v.t. 1. a) to produce; bear: »This land yields good crops. Mines yield ores. SYNONYM(S): furnish, supply. b) to give in return; bring in: »an investment which yielded a large profit. c) to fill a need; furnish; afford … Useful english dictionary
yield — yield1 [ji:ld] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(result)¦ 2¦(crops/profits)¦ 3¦(agree unwillingly)¦ 4¦(traffic)¦ 5¦(move/bend/break)¦ 6¦(give up fighting)¦ Phrasal verbs yield to something yield something<=>up ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [: Old English; Origin … Dictionary of contemporary English
yield — 1 verb 1 CROPS/PROFITS (T) to produce crops, profits etc: The land yielded a good wheat crop. | Mining shares often yield a high level of return. 2 RESULT (T) to produce a result, answer, or a piece of information: Careful analysis yielded the… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Yield — The percentage rate of return paid on a stock in the form of dividends, or the effective rate of interest paid on a bond or note. The New York Times Financial Glossary * * * ▪ I. yield yield 1 [jiːld] noun 1. [countable, uncountable] FINANCE the… … Financial and business terms
yield — A measure of the annual return on an investment. Chicago Board of Trade glossary 1) The production of a piece of land; e.g., his land yielded 100 bushels per acre. 2) The return provided by an investment; for example, if the return on an… … Financial and business terms
yield — 01. The oil fields of Alberta [yield] millions of gallons of oil each year. 02. Our strawberry patch [yielded] at least 10 pounds of berries last summer. 03. The Cuban government has refused to [yield] to pressure from the U.S. to end communist… … Grammatical examples in English
yield — I. verb Etymology: Middle English, from Old English gieldan; akin to Old High German geltan to pay Date: before 12th century transitive verb 1. archaic recompense, reward 2. to give or render as fitting, rightfully owed, or required 3. to give up … New Collegiate Dictionary
yield — {{11}}yield (n.) O.E. gield payment, sum of money (see YIELD (Cf. yield) (v.)); extended sense of production (as of crops) is first attested mid 15c. Earliest English sense survives in financial yield from investments. {{12}}yield (v.) O.E.… … Etymology dictionary
yield — v. & n. v. 1 tr. (also absol.) produce or return as a fruit, profit, or result (the land yields crops; the land yields poorly; the investment yields 15%). 2 tr. give up; surrender, concede; comply with a demand for (yielded the fortress; yielded… … Useful english dictionary
yield gene — noun Etymology: yield (II) + gene : any of a group of complementary genes no one of which has apparent individual effect; especially : one that directly or indirectly affects (as by increasing resistance to disease or to drouth) the yield of… … Useful english dictionary
crops — krÉ’p n. harvest, produce (Agriculture); group; sac like enlargement in the gullet of a bird which serves as a receptacle for partially digested food which is either digested or fed to nestlings; whip; short haircut v. harvest; cut short, clip;… … English contemporary dictionary