- Aftermath: nombre — secuela, resultado, consecuencia, repercusión. Frase: "Although a high price was paid, this concept should be of great assistance to countries seeking to formulate a policy response to bubbles and their aftermath, the balance sheet recession." (29/11/2013).
- Aground: adjetivo — encallado, varado. Frase: "The Keynesian revolution ultimately ran aground because..." (29/11/2013).
- Albeit: conjunción — aunque, bien que (añadida el 28/11).
jueves, 28 de noviembre de 2013
A
A — pronunciación éi:
D
D — pronunciación di:
- Daunting: verbo — desalentar, intimidar, acobardar, arredrar. Frase: "It is a new concept... which... assumes that some companies may respond to daunting balance-sheet damage by minimizing debt." (28/11/2013).
- Delve: verbo — ahondar, investigar, profundizar, hurgar [también delve in o delve into]. Frase: "Chapters 3 and 4 delve into research on the Great Depression..." (28/11/2013).
E
E — pronunciación i:
- Endeavor: esfuerzo — nombre: esfuerzo, empeño, tentativa, tratamiento — verbo: esforzarse, tratar de, tentar a. Frase: Indeed, since the publication of Keynes' General Theory in 1936 ushered in the era of macroeconomics, various explanations have been offered for the depression in an endeavor that, in Bernanke's words, "remains a fascinating intellectual challenge." (añadida el 28/11).
F
F — pronunciación éf:
- Front line: nombre — primera línea. Frase: From my vantage point on the front lines of Japanese financial markets... (28/11/2013).
O
O - pronunciación ou:
- Ongoing: adjetivo — en marcha, en curso, que continúa. Frase: "Chapter 7 is about ongoing bubbles and balance sheet recessions" (29/11/2013).
- Outlook: nombre — perspectiva, panorama, pronóstico, punto de vista, actitud, cariz. Frase: "This book was written with two main objectives and one goal. First, it seeks to analyze the current state of the Japanese economy and the outlook for the future. (28/11/2013).
- Outset: nombre — principio, comienzo, empieze Frase: "It was necessary to go back to the Depression because, as Bernanke's statement at the outset makes clear, so much of macroeconomics has been influenced by what happened during it." (28/11/2013).
P
P — pronunciación pi:
- Policymaker: nombre —formuladores de políticas, elaboradores de políticas a seguir. Frase: "Although I believe that the ongoing economic recovery in Japan is real, policymakers need to keep a close eye on risks..." (28/11/2013)
S
S — pronunciación éss:
- stance: nombre — postura, posición, actitud. Frase: "...and that the subsequent recovery of the U.S. economy was also made possible by a change in the policy stance of the Federal Reserve (28/11/2013).
- Strive: verbo — esforzarse, afanarse, esmerarse. Frase: "While the readers will be the ultimate judges, I believe that America's Great Depression, as was Japan's Great Recession, was a balance sheet recession triggered by businesses striving to minimize debt" (29/11/2013).
- Striving: nombre — esfuerzo (29/11/2013).
T
T — pronunciación ti:
- Triggered: nombre — desencadenado. Frase: "While the readers will be the ultimate judges, I believe that America's Great Depression, as was Japan's Great Recession, was a balance sheet recession triggered by businesses striving to minimize debt" (29/11/2013).
U
U — pronunciación iú:
- Uncharted:: inexplorado. Frase — "Balance Sheet Recession: Japan's Struggle with Uncharted Economics and its Global Implications." (28/11/2013).
- Undergo: verbo — someterse, sufrir, padecer, experimentar, pasar. Frase: "conventional economic theory will have to undergo some major changes." (25/11/2013)
- Underpin: nombre — apuntalar. Frase: "until I proved that some of the "lessons" from the Great Depression that underpin their views are themselves wrong (28/11/2013).
- Unwilling: adjetivo — reacio. Frase: "But even he was unable or unwilling to break away..." (29/11/2013).
- Ushered: marcó el comienzo (de usher: verbo — acompañar, hacer entrar, hacer pasar — nombre: ujier, portero, acomodador, guardia de sala, encargado del orden). Frase: "Indeed, since the publication of Keynes' General Theory in 1936 ushered in the era of macroeconomics... (añadida el 28/11).
- Utterly: nombre — totalmente, absolutamente, completamente, por completo. Frase: "From my vantage point on the front lines of Japanese financial markets, these policy recommendations seemed utterly unrealistic,..." (28/11/2013).
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