释义 |
revaluere‧val‧ue /ˌriːˈvæljuː/ verb [transitive] VERB TABLErevalue |
Present | I, you, we, they | revalue | | he, she, it | revalues | Past | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | revalued | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have revalued | | he, she, it | has revalued | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had revalued | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will revalue | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have revalued |
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Present | I | am revaluing | | he, she, it | is revaluing | | you, we, they | are revaluing | Past | I, he, she, it | was revaluing | | you, we, they | were revaluing | Present perfect | I, you, we, they | have been revaluing | | he, she, it | has been revaluing | Past perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | had been revaluing | Future | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will be revaluing | Future perfect | I, you, he, she, it, we, they | will have been revaluing |
- In 1985, the yen was revalued by more than 40%.
- Once it's sold, the property is revalued at the sale price.
- Football club balance sheets do not always show the full value of the assets: 48% do not revalue land and buildings.
- In November the government had been forced to revalue its gold reserves to provide additional cover for the rupee.
- It has already revalued its properties, bringing a £7m surplus.
- Meanwhile the county has revalued its assets to reflect its long lease and the planning consents obtained.
- Secondly, because the £75,000 limit is not a static figure but is revalued every year in line with price increases.
- This can be dealt with by revaluing the asset annually using special indices of cost of capital and adjusting depreciation provisions accordingly.
► Currenciesbob, nounbureau de change, nouncent, nouncentime, nounchange, verbC-note, nouncoin, verbcoinage, nounconvertible, adjectivecrown, nouncurrency, nouncurrency peg, nound., decimalization, noundenomination, nounDeutschmark, noundevalue, verbdime, noundinar, noundollar, noundoubloon, noundough, noundrachma, nounducat, nounexchange rate, nounfarthing, nounfifty, numberfirm, adjectivefiver, nounfive-spot, nounfloat, verbforeign exchange, nounFr, franc, noungold, noungold card, noungroat, nounguilder, nounguinea, nounhalf crown, nounhalf dollar, nounhalfpenny, nounha'penny, nounhard currency, nounkrona, nounkrone, nounKrugerrand, nounlegal tender, nounlira, nounmark, nounmill, nounmint, nounmint, verbmoney, nounmoney supply, nounnickel, nounnote, nounp., paper money, nounparity, nounpence, nounpennies, penny, nounpennyworth, nounpetrodollars, nounpiece, nounquarter, nounquid, nounrand, nounrate of exchange, nounrevalue, verbriyal, nounrouble, nounruble, nounrupee, nounsawbuck, nounshekel, nounshilling, nounsilver, nounsilver dollar, nounsingle, nounsingle currency, nounsixpence, nounsoft currency, nounsovereign, nounsterling, nounstrong, adjectivetenner, nounthreepence, nounthreepenny bit, nountraveller's cheque, nountuppence, nountuppeny, adjectivetwopenny, adjectiveweaken, verbyen, nounyuan, noun 1to examine something again in order to calculate its present value: The company’s land has been revalued at £16.9m.2to increase the value of a country’s money in relation to that of other countries OPP devalue: The dollar has just been revalued.GRAMMAR Revalue is usually passive.—revaluation /riːˌvæljuˈeɪʃən/ noun [countable, uncountable] |