crisis的意思和读音

crisis

: [ˈkraɪsɪs] : ['kraɪsɪs]

n.

crises  

adj.+n.political crisis,serious crisis,international crisis,severe crisis,acute crisis

v.+n.solve crisis,prevent crisis,cause crisis,resolve crisis,weather crisis

n.disaster,catastrophe,emergency,calamity,predicament

crisisn.

1.a time of great danger, difficulty or confusion when problems must be solved or important decisions must be made

a political/financial crisis

the government's latest economic crisis

The business is still in crisis but it has survived the worst of the recession.退

The Labour Party was facing an identity crisis .

an expert in crisis management

We provide help to families in crisis situations.

In times of crisis I know which friends I can turn to.

The party was suffering a crisis of confidence among its supporters(= they did not trust it any longer) .

2.a time when a problem, a bad situation or an illness is at its worst point

Their marriage has reached crisis point.

The fever has passed its crisis.

n.1.,;(,),;;2.,,3.,退;;

n.1.an urgent, difficult, or dangerous situation; a dangerous situation in someones personal or professional life when something could fail2.a time when a disease starts to get better or worse very suddenly

1. creditor n. crisis n. critical adj. ...

3. rib-rope + crisis ,---- cr-cross cross ...

4. 37:rope n 38:crisis n 39:vital adj ...

5. criminal n. , crisis n. , critic n. ...

6. 〖 dangerous;perilous〗 crisis〖 straightforwardwords〗 ...

7. 〖 understandable〗 〖 barrier;crisis;difficulty〗 〖 loathtopart〗 ...

8. copper n.① crisis n.① , , cruise v/n.

:,,,,,,,

1.Mr Park seems to have fallen foul of both the two main causes of official paranoia: the internet and the financial crisis.2——

2.The Prime Minister has led us steadfastly, and with admirable fortitude, as our national anchor in a time of crisis.”,

3.more dreams will be deferred and denied. and our nation will sink deeper into a crisis that, at some point, we may not be able to reverse.

4.The questions are two: how to restructure regulation for the long haul; and how much of their crisis tool box to use now.

5.The excess capacity is created in the run-up to the crisis, when underpricing of risk expedites a substantial build-up in the capital stock.

6.Unlike Kleinfeld, Pollack does not feel that the word "crisis" should be avoided when discussing boys' issues.

7.As with any other problem that needs solving, the first step in crisis management is to identify the true extent and nature of the crisis.

8.The truth is that China is not unstoppable at all. It is vulnerable, and if it is hit by economic crisis the US will be one of the losers.

9.The rebound has taken many by surprise, as the world economy is still emerging from its worst crisis since the Great Depression of 1929.1929

10.And that last thing he said about rushing out is really important because experts say that when a crisis happens, every second counts.