| 单词 |
obsolescence |
| 释义 |
obsolescenceob‧so‧les‧cence /ˌɒbsəˈlesəns $ ˌɑːb-/ noun [uncountable]  - For the less scrupulous, this has become the age of the worker with built in obsolescence.
- It is also worth noting that an operating lease transfers the risk of obsolescence from the lessee to the lessor.
- Managers and executives faced with their own likely technical obsolescence are in some senses confronted with their own professional mortality.
- So they followed their cousins in the car industry and made their buildings with built-in obsolescence.
- The faster products change, the faster they become obsolete, and even obsolescence creates openings.
- The international community clung to Resolution 242 despite its growing obsolescence, as the only agreed basis for a solution.
- The shortcomings of economics are not original error but uncorrected obsolescence.
- There has been a renewal of interest and research into questions of obsolescence, and storage costs.
► planned/built-in obsolescence- So they followed their cousins in the car industry and made their buildings with built-in obsolescence.
1when something becomes old-fashioned and no longer useful, because something newer and better has been invented2planned/built-in obsolescence when a product is designed so that it will soon become unfashionable or impossible to use and will need replacing: the planned obsolescence of some software |
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