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yield  

EN[jiːld]
US
Frendement WYield
  • Le yield est un anglicisme qui désigne : Un terme économique : yield management Une instruction en programmation : yield (instruction) Le rendement d’un procédé de gravure c’est-à-dire à la proportion de puces fonctionnelles par wafer plaque ronde,
  • NomPLyields
    1. OBS Payment; tribute.
      1. A product; the quantity of something produced.
        1. Zucchini plants always seem to produce a high yield of fruit. ‎
      2. (law) The current return as a percentage of the price of a stock or bond.
        1. Investors face a quandary. Cash offers a return of virtually zero in many developed countries; government-bond yields may have risen in recent weeks but they are still unattractive. Equities have suffered two big bear markets since 2000 and are wobbling again. It is hardly surprising that pension funds, insurers and endowments are searching for new sources of return.
    2. VerbeSGyieldsPRyieldingPTyieldedPTyoldPPyieldedPPyolden
      1. OBS To pay, give in payment; repay, recompense; reward; requite.
        1. To furnish; to afford; to render; to give forth.
          1. To give way; to allow another to pass first.
            1. Yield the right of way to pedestrians.
          2. To give as required; to surrender, relinquish or capitulate.
            1. They refuse to yield to the enemy.
          3. VI To give way; to succumb to a force.
            1. To produce as return, as from an investment.
              1. Historically, that security yields a high return.
            2. (mathematics) To produce as a result.
              1. Adding 3 and 4 yields a result of 7.
            3. (engineering, materials science, of a material specimen) To pass the material's yield point and undergo plastic deformation.
              1. (rare) To admit to be true; to concede; to allow.
              2. Plus d'exemples
                1. Utilisé au milieu de la phrase
                  • Subsequent intramolecular cyclization of strictosidine yielded strictosamide, a penultimate precursor of CAM formation in C.
                  • Column chromatography of fraction E1 yielded ursolic acid, euscaphic acid and corosolic acid.
                  • Although acutely conscious of living in a 'wilderness,' they stoutheartedly refused to yield an inch to pioneer prejudices or frontier values.
                2. Utilisé dans la fin de la phrase
                  • That is the preponderating consideration to which everything else has to yield.

              Meaning of yield for the defined word.

              Grammaticalement, ce mot "yield" est un nom, plus spécifiquement, un noms dénombrable. C'est aussi un verbe, plus spécifiquement, un verbes intransitif.
              • Partie du discours Hiérarchie
                1. Noms
                  • Noms Dénombrable
                  • Verbes
                    • Verbes intransitifs
                  Difficulté: Niveau 1
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                  Facile     ➨     Difficile
                  Définition: Niveau 9
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                  Précis    ➨     Polyvalent
                  Liens Connexes:
                  1. en yielded
                  2. en yielding
                  3. en yieldy
                  4. en yields
                  5. en yielder
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