stock up / stɒk /

囤积囤货备货储备

stock up4 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory.
  2. a quantity of something accumulated, as for future use: a stock of provisions.
  3. livestock.
adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. kept regularly on hand, as for use or sale; staple; standard: stock articles.
  2. having as one's job the care of a concern's goods: a stock clerk.
  3. of the common or ordinary type; in common use: a stock argument.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to furnish with a stock or supply.
  2. to furnish with stock, as a farm with horses, cattle, etc.
  3. to lay up in store, as for future use.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to lay in a stock of something.

stock up 近义词

stock up

等同于 provide

stock up

等同于 stockpile

stock up

等同于 squirrel away

stock up

等同于 deposit

更多stock up例句

  1. The stock closed at $253, more than double the $120 the price at which the company and its bankers initially valued them.
  2. Taking the company public in 2012 at a valuation of about $2 billion, ServiceNow today has a stock market value of almost $90 billion.
  3. As for value stocks, investors are getting the message on that front too.
  4. The worst crash in the company’s stock was a plunge of almost 95%.
  5. Nikola's stock lost 11 percent on Thursday and is down an additional 15 percent in Friday morning trading.
  6. In our headlong quest for a legally perfect society, we don’t take the time to take stock of what‘s been created so far.
  7. If his 20s were about traveling and his 30s “about taking stock,” he hopes his 40s will be about “building and expanding.”
  8. The obnoxious meddling journalist is a stock character in fiction.
  9. On Friday, the stock market hit new highs—even as wages were stagnating.
  10. Yes, the stock market is booming but overwhelmingly Americans are unhappy with their economic situation—and for good reason.
  11. Neither privately owned nor government stock is entitled to voting power.
  12. I didn't take much stock in the yarn at the time, but I'm beginning to think he had it straight.
  13. One day she had heard a man say, "If there is a drought we shall have the devil to pay with our stock before winter is over."
  14. Cotton exchanges reopened on November 16, and stock exchanges opened for restricted trading shortly thereafter.
  15. The white ranchmen in the valley were all fencing in their lands; no more free running of stock.