- to precipitate a crisis
- ускорить кризис
English-russian dctionary of diplomacy. 2014.
English-russian dctionary of diplomacy. 2014.
precipitate — [prē sip′ə tāt΄, prisip′ə tāt΄; ] for adj. [ & ] n. [, prē sip′ə tit, pri sip′ətit, prē sip′ ə tāt΄, pri sip′ətāt΄] vt. precipitated, precipitating [< L praecipitatus, pp. of praecipitare < praeceps: see PRECIPICE] 1. to throw headlong;… … English World dictionary
precipitate — pre•cip•i•tate v. [[t]prɪˈsɪp ɪˌteɪt[/t]] adj., n. [[t] tɪt, ˌteɪt[/t]] v. tat•ed, tat•ing, adj. n. 1) to hasten the occurrence of; bring about prematurely or suddenly: to precipitate a crisis[/ex] 2) to fling or hurl down 3) to cast violently or … From formal English to slang
Crisis theory — is generally associated with Marxian economics. In this context crisis refers to what is called, even currently and outside Marxian theory in many European countries a conjuncture or especially sharp bust cycle of the regular boom and bust… … Wikipedia
Precipitate — Pre*cip i*tate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Precipitated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Precipitating}.] 1. To throw headlong; to cast down from a precipice or height. [1913 Webster] She and her horse had been precipitated to the pebbled region of the river. W.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
crisis — n. 1) to cause, precipitate, provoke, stir up a crisis 2) to aggravate a crisis 3) to avert, forestall a crisis 4) to defuse, overcome, settle a crisis; to ride out a crisis 5) an acute, grave, serious; impending; mounting crisis 6) a cabinet;… … Combinatory dictionary
precipitate — precipitately, adv. precipitateness, n. precipitative, adj. precipitator, n. v. /pri sip i tayt /; adj., n. /pri sip i tit, tayt /, v., precipitated, precipitating, adj., n. v.t. 1. to hasten the occurrence of; bri … Universalium
crisis — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ acute, grave, major, serious, severe, terrible, worst ▪ the worst economic crisis for fifty years ▪ … Collocations dictionary
precipitate — precipitates, precipitating, precipitated (The verb is pronounced [[t]prɪsɪ̱pəteɪt[/t]]. The adjective is pronounced [[t]prɪsɪ̱pɪtət[/t]].) 1) VERB If something precipitates an event or situation, usually a bad one, it causes it to happen… … English dictionary
precipitate — 1 verb 1 (T) formal to make something serious happen more quickly than was expected; hasten: The economic crisis was precipitated by the US s inability to deal with the budget deficit. 2 (T) to force someone or something into a particular state… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
precipitate — 1. verb 1) the incident precipitated a crisis Syn: bring about/on, cause, lead to, give rise to, instigate, trigger, spark, touch off, provoke, hasten, accelerate, expedite 2) they were precipitated down the mountain Syn … Thesaurus of popular words
precipitate — verb Precipitate is used with these nouns as the object: ↑crisis, ↑relapse … Collocations dictionary