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词汇 yield
释义 yield
verb
uk /jiːld/ us /jiːld/

yieldverb (PRODUCE)


C2[ T ]
to supply or produce something positive such as a profit, an amount of food or information: 产生;出产;得出
an attempt to yield increased profits提高利润的努力
The investigation yielded some unexpected results.调查得出了一些出乎意料的结果。
Favourable weather yielded a good crop.好天气带来了好收成。
The process yields oil for industrial use.
Burning waste yields energy that can be used for electric power or heating.
The excavation yielded some superb artifacts.
Early radio equipment yielded poor sound quality.
The experiments yielded some surprising results.
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Creating and producing
anti-creative
artefact
attribute
attribute something to someone
bang something out
bash
crank
generative
generativity
grind
grind something out
handmade
knock
rig
rig something up
roll (something) out
rollout
run something up
rush something out
stitch

yieldverb (GIVE UP)


[ I or T ]
to give up the control of or responsibility for something, often because you have been forced to: (常指被迫)放弃,让出
They were forced to yield (up) their land to the occupying forces.他们被迫将领土割让给占领军。
Despite renewed pressure to give up the occupied territory, they will not yield.尽管有新的压力要求放弃被占领的土地,他们就是不愿屈服。
They refused to yield power.
They had to yield control of the river area.
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Stop having or doing something
abdicate
abdication
bandh
bomb
bomb out
break with something
butt
forfeit
forfeitable
forgo
forsake
forswear
give up the ghostidiom
lay
relinquishment
self-denying
self-denyingly
self-renouncing
self-renunciation
throw

yieldverb (BEND/BREAK)


[ I ]formal
to bend or break under pressure: (受压)弯曲,折断,垮掉
His legs began to yield under the sheer weight of his body.他的双腿连自己的体重也承受不住,开始弯曲。
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Flexible, loose and yielding
adrift
bendable
bendy
ductile
ductility
flowing
jointed
lax
limply
limpness
pliantly
ragdoll
relax
rubbery
semi-flexible
tensile
uncompressed
unconstricted
unstayed
unstuck

yieldverb (STOP)


[ I ]US(UKgive way)
to stop in order to allow other vehicles to go past, especially before you drive onto a bigger road: 停车让道(以让其他车辆通过)
If you're going downhill, you need to yield to bikers going uphill.下山的时候,你需要停车让上山的骑自行车的人先行。
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

On the road: driving & operating road vehicles
aquaplaning
back someone up
biting point
boxed in
branch off
chauffeur
gun
handle
lock
platooning
pull
pull someone up
push start
range anxiety
reverse
road rage
skid
speeding
the RAC
ton

Phrasal verb


yield to something
yield
noun[ Cusually plural ]
uk /jiːld/ us /jiːld/
an amount of something positive, such as food or profit, that is produced or supplied: 产生;出产;得出
Crop yields have risen steadily.农作物产量稳步增长。
Yields on gas and electricity shares are consistently high.天然气与电力股票的收益一直很高
Synonym
proceeds
This year's yield was very large.
Scientists have greatly increased the yield of crops such as wheat, rice and corn.
Farmers add fertilizer to increase the yield.
The fertile soil enabled farmers to produce abundant yields.
Plant breeding has increased yields and has improved the nutritional value of several crops.
SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases

Farming - general words
agricultural extension
agroecology
agroforestry
biodynamic
cultivate
harvester
homestead
hungry gap
hydroponic
hydroponically
inorganically
landrace
reap
the Agrarian Revolution
thrash
tillage
U-pick
unharvested
unsown
untillable

You can also find related words, phrases, and synonyms in the topics:


Profits & losses

yield | American Dictionary


yield
verb
us/jild/

yieldverb (PRODUCE)


[ T ]
to supply or produce something positive such as a profit, an amount of food, or information:
Some mutual funds are currently yielding 15% on new money invested.
[ T ]
If something yields information, it provides it:
A letter found by the FBI last week may yield new clues.

yieldverb (GIVE UP)


[ I/T ]
to give up the control of or responsibility for something, often because you have been forced to:
[ T ]to yield power
[ I/T ]
If you yield to something, you accept that you have been defeated by it:
[ I ]It’s easy to yield to the temptation to borrow a lot of money.
[ I/T ]
To yield to traffic coming from another direction is to wait and allow it to go first.
yield
noun[ Cusually pl ]
us/jild/

yieldnoun[C usually pl] (PRODUCE)


a profit or an amount esp. of a crop produced:
Over the past 50 years, crop yields have risen steadily in the US.

yield | Business English


yield
noun[ C or U ]
uk /jiːld/us
FINANCE
the total amount of profit or income produced from a business or investment:
The bond's yield fell to 6.09%.
high/low yieldThese securities are speculative and may involve greater risks and have higher yields.
an increase/reduction in yieldThe payout on a 25-year policy is reduced to £100,271, which represents a reduction in yield from 13.3% to 13%.
a 30-day/30-year yield
PRODUCTION
the total amount of a crop, product, etc. that is produced or supplied:
Over a 15-year period, the average yield of dairy cows in the UK had increased by 34%.
These salts continuously bombard agricultural soils, stressing plants and reducing crop yields.
MONEY
the average amount of money that an airline receives from each passenger for each mile they travel or that a hotel receives from each guest for each night they stay:
Yield management is not really new to hoteliers, since identical rooms have been sold for higher prices during high season and for lower prices during low season for generations.
See also
bond yield
current yield
dividend yield
earnings yield
effective yield
equity yield
gilt yields
gross yield
high-yield
initial yield
maturity yield
net yield
nominal yield
redemption yield
running yield
true yield
yield
verb[ T ]
uk /jiːld/us
FINANCE
to supply or produce a profit, income, etc.:
The stake, analysts say, could yield $700m a year in revenue.
British shares currently yield 3.3%.
yield profit/returnsEven the most unglamorous sectors of the market can yield big returns.
PRODUCTION
to supply or produce a crop, product, etc.:
Oil fields and reserves are yielding more oil than had been thought possible, because of technological advances.
to supply or produce information, results, etc.:
yield benefits/information/resultsSubsequent product tests yielded better results.
His emails to company executives yielded no response.

Examples of yield


yield
This yields payoffs of 18 and 54 to the two players, respectively, for a total payoff of 72.
This can best be done in clearly situated case studies, which yield qualitative findings that can then be examined for possible explanations and further enquiry.
Structural consistency is an example of a strong rule that has the power to invalidate changes that yield physically unsupportable designs.
Page also correctly notes that localist representations not only can yield insightful and interpretable psychological theories, but neurally plausible theories as well.
Activities that have large starting capital requirements are pursued by relatively few people but yield lucrative returns.
For the maize yield and net returns equations, the estimated coefficients of the farm size variables were statistically different between the adopters and non-adopters.
But farm size does not appear to explain differences in yields and net returns when the technology is adopted.
The constant represents the expected project yield in capital (per unit invested), net of monitoring costs.
Similarly, the second of equations (30) yields equation (32) and the inequality (33)with the tangent replaced by the minus cotangent.
The first array default yields a default list of paths for every node.
These figures show that the diameter is likewise insensitive to the unsteady feed-in radius (0, t): a 5% input variation yields around a 1% response.
It is the signature from land surfaces that will yield the most detectable evidence for photosynthesis.
Structural equation modelling for studying genotyperenvironment interactions of physiological traits affecting yield in wheat.
The sonorant of the cluster is devoiced, which yields a sonority profile sufficient to avoid violation of this constraint.
In contrast, when observers were asked to reach for the targets (without seeing their hand) the convergence yielded nearer reaches, and the divergence farther reaches.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.

Collocations withyield


yield

These are words often used in combination with yield.

Click on a collocation to see more examples of it.


agricultural yield
The existing literature on the role of agriculturalyield performance in tropical deforestation is mixed.
annual yield
Correlation between index values averaged across sample times within a year and annualyield.
average yield
The increase in soil carbon content in contrast, affects both averageyield and its volatility.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
See all collocations with yield
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