slumps
n. 萧条期( slump的名词复数 ); <美>(个人、球队等的)低潮状态; (销售量、价格、价值等的)骤降; 猛跌
v. 大幅度下降,暴跌( slump的第三人称单数 ); 沉重或突然地落下[倒下]
If something such as the value of something slumps, it falls suddenly and by a large amount.
Net profits slumped by 41%...
净利润暴跌了 41%。
Government popularity in Scotland has slumped to its lowest level since the 1970s.
苏格兰政府的支持率骤跌至 20 世纪 70 年代以来的最低水平。 <b>Slump</b> is also a noun.
A slump is a time when many people in a country are unemployed and poor.
...the slump of the early 1980s.
20 世纪 80 年代初的大萧条
If you slump somewhere, you fall or sit down there heavily, for example because you are very tired or you feel ill.
She slumped into a chair...
她轰然倒在了椅子上。
He saw the driver slumped over the wheel.
他看见司机一头栽在了方向盘上。
Deflation could emerge from simultaneous slumps in the world's three major economies.
如果世界经济三大主体同时衰退,通货紧缩就会出现.
This is the cycle of economic booms and slumps.
这是经济繁荣和经济萧条的周期变化.
Recent productivity figures look good, but these figures always fall during slumps and rise during recoveries.
近来的生产率数字看上去不错, 但是这些数据总是随着衰退而下降,随着复苏而上升.
M. sales are in line with and other markets market slumps in southeast Southeast Asiaalthough GM.
卡莱尔说,通用汽车公司在东南亚的销量也出现了同等程度的下滑.
He clutches his chest, staggers to the nearest building and slumps sitting to the sidewalk.
他抓住胸口, 步履蹒跚地走到最近的墙旁,颓然倒在人行道上.