liquidate

suomi-englanti sanakirja

liquidate englannista suomeksi

  1. ottaa hengiltä

  2. suorittaa loppuun

  3. realisoida, likvidoida

  1. Verbi

  2. pehmentää

  3. likvidoida

  4. likvidoida, realisoida

  5. maksaa pois

  6. realisoida

liquidate englanniksi

  1. (synonym of); to liquidize.

  2. (quote-journal)|location=London|publisher=(...) For the Society of Arts|Royal Society &91;of Arts&93; by Bell & Sons|Bell and Daldy,(nb...)|year_published=4 April 1862|volume=X|issue=489|page=324|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/journalofsociety10soci_0/page/324/mode/1up|column=2|oclc=880942705|passage=The Para rubber is of very fine quality, (..) whilst the Ceara, a very inferior quality, often passes through a species of decomposition before arriving in this country, the heat of the ship's hold being sufficient to partially liquidate its substance.

  3. To make (a sound) less harsh.

  4. To up (money or other assets) wastefully; to dissipate, to squander, to waste.

  5. (RQ:Defoe Reformation) / ''Thoſe'' damn themſelves to heap an ill-got Store, / ''Theſe'' liquidate their VVealth, and covet to be poor.

  6. (senseid) To kill (someone), usually violently, and especially for some ideological or political aim; to assassinate, to murder; also, to abolish or eliminate (something); to away with, to an end to.

  7. (sense) (synonyms)

    (sense) (antonyms)

  8. (quote-journal) Now the State farms are being liquidated. Several hundred have been broken up and 4,000,000 acres of land distributed among the collective farms. A Riga correspondent says that the collective farmers must pay for the stock, implements, machinery and buildings for which the State allows a few years' credit, "but apparently the land itself is received gratis with the laborers hitherto employed on it, who become additional shareholders of the collective farms to which they are allotted."

  9. (RQ:C. S. Lewis Abolition of Man) Once we killed bad men: now we liquidate unsocial elements.

  10. (quote-journal) was: "Should I destroy the journal?" Ann's answer to this question was: "Put a match to it.(quote-gloss) (..) Ann assumes that homosexual thoughts and experiences are evil and, if possible, they should be liquidated from consciousness. It is appalling that Ann is allowed to give out such advice!

  11. (quote-book)|series=Writers from the Other Europe|location=Harmondsworth, Middlesex London|publisher=Penguin Books|year_published=1981|section=part 6 (The Angels)|page=161|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bookoflaughterfo00kund/page/161/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-14-005924-3|passage="The first step in liquidating a people," said (quote-gloss) Hubl, "is to erase its memory. Destroy its books, its culture, its history. Then have someone write new books, manufacture a new culture, invent a new history. Before long the nation will begin to forget what it is and what it was. The world around it will forget even faster."

  12. (senseid)

  13. To convert (assets) into cash; to encash, to realize, to redeem.

  14. (quote-journal)

  15. (quote-book)|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=(publisher)|Doubleday|page=46|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/undergroundrailr0000whit_e7f0/page/46/mode/1up|isbn=978-0-385-53703-2|passage=Her only relative was a niece in Boston, who arranged for a local lawyer to liquidate Mrs. Garner’s property.

  16. To settle (a debt) by paying the outstanding amount; to off.

  17. (quote-journal)|volume=VI|issue=292|page=413|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/colonialgazette06colo/page/n406/mode/1up|column=2|oclc=1042144212|passage=The excess of the former amount over the latter constitutes of course a debt due by this Company to the banking company, the settlement of which has engaged the earnest attention of the Board. Their wish was to liquidate that amount by the proceeds of sales of property; but the unfavourable state of the colony has prevented their doing more than effecting a reduction of the debt by a payment to account.

  18. (quote-book) was open to receive offers, within the limits of the treaty of St. Omer, to redeem some or all of the territories he had pledged.

  19. To settle the financial affairs of (a corporation, partnership, or other business) with the aim of ceasing operations, by determining liabilities, using assets to pay debts, and apportioning the remaining assets if any; to up.

  20. To make (something) clear and intelligible.

  21. (RQ:Walpole Painting in England)

  22. (RQ:Bentham Morals)

  23. (RQ:Federalist)

  24. To resolve or settle (differences, disputes, etc.).

  25. (RQ:Walpole Castle of Otranto)

  26. To ascertain (an amount of money), especially by agreement or through litigation; also, to out (financial accounts) properly.

  27. (RQ:Cibber Apology)'', and farther to remonſtrate to him, that as he novv ſtood in (quote-gloss) ''Collier''’s Place, his Penſion of 700''l.'' vvas liable to the ſame Conditions, that ''Collier'' had receiv’d it upon; vvhich vvere, that it ſhould be only payable during our being the only Company permitted to act, but in caſe another ſhould be ſet up againſt us, that then this Penſion vvas to be liquidated into an equal Share vvith us; and vvhich vve novv hoped he vvould be contented vvith.

  28. (quote-book)|edition=2nd|location=London|publisher=(...) Dodsley|James Dodsley(nb...)|volume=IV|page=|pageurl=|oclc=49002788|passage=In your laſt letter, of the 7th, you accuſe me, moſt unjuſtly, of being in arrears in my correſpondence; vvhereas, if our epiſtolary accounts vvere fairly liquidated, I believe you vvould be brought in conſiderably debtor.|footer=A figurative use.

  29. (senseid) Of a corporation, partnership, or other business: to settle financial affairs with the aim of ceasing operations; to go into liquidation, to wind up.

  30. (ux)

  31. (quote-book)

  32. Of an amount of money: ascertained, determined, fixed.

  33. (quote-book), 1847|location=London|publisher=Printed by & Spottiswoode|George E. Eyre and William Spottiswoode,(nb...); and published (...) by W. Benning & Co,(nb...)|page=521|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/acollectionpubl14britgoog/page/521/mode/1up|oclc=1015503397|passage=I ''A. B.'' ''here name and design the Granter'' grant me to have instantly borrowed and received ''C. D.'' ''here name and design the Creditor'' the Sum of ''insert the Sum'' Sterling; which Sum I bind myself and my Heirs, Executors, and Representatives whomsoever, without the Necessity of discussing them in their Order, to repay (..) with a Fifth Part more of liquidate Penalty in case of Failure, (..)

  34. (inflection of)

  35. (feminine plural of)

  36. (es-verb form of)