bail out 的 2 个定义
- the act of parachuting from an aircraft, especially to escape a crash, fire, etc.
- an instance of coming to the rescue, especially financially: a government bailout of a large company.
- an alternative, additional choice, or the like: If the highway is jammed, you have two side roads as bailouts.
- of, relating to, or consisting of means for relieving an emergency situation: bailout measures for hard-pressed smallbusinesses.
bail out 近义词
help
escape
更多bail out例句
- Weeks after a federal bailout helped Metro veer away from a fiscal crisis, the transit agency plans to borrow $360 million through bond sales to expedite construction projects officials say will make the system safer.
- They also say the bucks are expensive bailouts for badly managed Blue States.
- As head of the San Francisco Fed more than a decade ago, she sided with Wells Fargo on a question of whether banks were stable enough to resume paying dividends after the financial crisis and bank bailouts.
- Experts have long feared that the weight of that ever-rising mountain of euros is so great only a Greece-like bailout can keep Italy from exiting the common currency.
- The federal bailout was a needed injection for households and several industries, but it didn’t directly provide financial help to local governments served by the Metro system.
- The bailout crybabies of Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Wells Fargo, and all the rest are easy targets—and deserving ones, too.
- Ex-AIG CEO Maurice ‘Hank’ Greenberg is in court seeking $40 billion from the government over its massive bailout.
- The solution was a bailout—of AIG, and of the financial system as a whole.
- In 1998, when the hedge fund Long Term Capital Management blew up, the New York Fed helped organize a $3.65 billion bailout.
- Five months later, the New York Fed tried (without success) to organize a bailout of Lehman Brothers.