slumping
v. 大幅度下降,暴跌( slump的現在分詞 ); 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%...
淨利潤暴跌了 41%。
Government popularity in Scotland has slumped to its lowest level since the 1970s.
蘇格蘭政府的支援率驟跌至 20 世紀 70 年代以來的最低水平。 <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 世紀 80 年代初的大蕭條
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...
她轟然倒在了椅子上。
He saw the driver slumped over the wheel.
他看見司機一頭栽在了方向盤上。
Two of the world's top four computer manufacturers have announced a shotgun wedding prompted by slumping sales and disastrous financial losses.
世界四大計算機制造商中的兩家因銷量銳減和嚴重虧損已閃電宣佈合併。
Hong Kong's slumping economy also caused a rise in bankruptcy applications.
香港經濟低迷,破產申請個案隨之上升.
Staymakers advocated them for all growing girls to avoid slumping and slouched.
束衣製造者們鼓吹肩帶可以防止所有成長中的女孩們變得鬆懈和懶散.
I've certainly had a basinful of slumping in front of the television.
老是坐在電視機前看電視,我實在沒勁.
Slumping in my chair, chin in hands, I wondered what all this was worth.
我癱坐在椅子上, 用手託著下巴, 心中問道:做這一切值嗎?