excess的意思和读音

excess

: [ˈekˌses] : [ˈekses]

n.

adj.

excesses  excessing  excessed  

adj.+n.excess weight,excess energy,excess alcohol

n.shortage,moderation

n.surplus,glut,overload,surfeit,overindulgence

adj.extra,additional,spare,superfluous,leftover

excessn.

1.[sing][u]more than is necessary, reasonable or acceptable

You can throw away any excess.

Are you suffering from an excess of stress in your life?

In an excess of enthusiasm I agreed to work late.

He started drinking to excess after losing his job.便

The increase will not be in excess of(= more than) two per cent.

2.[c][u]an amount by which sth is larger than sth else

We cover costs up to £600 and then you pay the excess. 600

3.[c][ususing]the part of an insurance claim that a person has to pay while the insurance company pays the rest

There is an excess of £100 on each claim under this policy. 100

4.[pl]extreme behaviour that is unacceptable, illegal or immoral

adj.

1.[obn]in addition to an amount that is necessary, usual or legal

Excess food is stored as fat.

Driving with excess alcohol in the blood is a serious offence.

n.1.;2.,()3.,4.,5.1.;2.,()3.,4.,5.

adj.1.,,

n.1.a larger amount of something than is usual or necessary2.cruel or violent actions, especially when committed by a government, army, or police force; behavior that you consider to be wrong because it is too extreme3.a way of behaving in which you do dangerous or extreme things4.an insurance deductible1.a larger amount of something than is usual or necessary2.cruel or violent actions, especially when committed by a government, army, or police force; behavior that you consider to be wrong because it is too extreme3.a way of behaving in which you do dangerous or extreme things4.an insurance deductible

adj.1.more than is usual or necessary2.an excess amount of money is an extra amount that you pay

v.1.to get rid of some workers in order to make a company more effective

1. emotional a. () excess n. expel v. ...

2. exceed v. excess n. fodder n. ...

3. secede 退 excess excessive ...

4. secede 退 excess excessive ...

5. 〖 excessivelysquander〗 excess〖 passabarrier〗 ...

6. → exceed excess , → succeed ...

7. undress vt. 使, , 使 excess n. , , , , eighth num. ...

8. exceptional excess n. a. excessive ...

:,,,,,,,,,,,

1.Do you know how much water you should drink to neutralize the excess salt in salt fish? How much you lose through perspiration?

2.We are sorry to tell you that we have no excess cable for you at the moment.

3.It was evident that this excess of caution proceeded from an experience that no subtlety on the part of their enemies could deceive them.

4.However, in the case of a very abundant sequence, sufficient excess can be present to allow amplification in subsequent steps.

5.Finishing with a wooden float, instead of a steel float, avoids overworking of the surface and bringing an excess of cement to the top.

6."Most likely the Fed will look to the interest paid on excess reserves as the indicator of the stance of interest rate policy, " he said.“,”

7.Some of that results from excess money created by quantitative easing in the U. S. looking for better returns abroad, economists say.

8.Among its doctrines was that the trade balance must be favourable, meaning an excess of exports over imports.

9.Instead, arguably, it was the excess securitisation of US subprime mortgages that unexpectedly set off the current solvency crisis.

10.If the air exceeds the stoichiometric requirement of coal, the combustor is in an overall excess air mode as in a conventional operation.