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rollout

/rohl-out/US // ˈroʊlˌaʊt //

展开,展开工作,推出,展开行动

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the first public showing of an aircraft.
    • : Informal. the introduction or inauguration of a new product or service, as by an advertising campaign, public announcement, or exhibition: the most lavish rollout in soft-drink history.
    • : Football. an offensive maneuver in which the quarterback, having the option to run or pass, takes the ball from the center, moves back a distance toward his goal line, and then moves forward and toward a sideline.

Examples

  • Maybe local and state officials can’t improve their rollouts quickly enough.

  • Bloomgarden, the doctor at Northwestern Memorial, says the new Zocdoc tool will be a “great addition” to Chicago’s vaccine drive, but that it addresses only one of the issues with the rollout.

  • Tegna has already hired two audience engagement specialists to lead Verify’s rollout on social media platforms.

  • The government has told the press that Co-WIN will make real-time vaccine-related data available to officials monitoring the rollout, and that the app will make it harder for people to use proxies.

  • It’s the first line of many as more products are slated for rollout later this year tied to data insights from other brands like Women’s Health and Men’s Health.

  • It was an unmitigated disaster, and Lee compares it to the healthcare.gov rollout.

  • Todd is at his best discussing the unbelievably botched rollout of healthcare.gov.

  • The rocky nature of her book rollout is fair warning that the road ahead will not be easy.

  • Priebus derided the rollout of her new book, Hard Choices, and claimed her poll numbers are sinking.

  • It was a rocky tenure from her appointment all the way up to the botched Healthcare.gov rollout.