释义 |
spillover
spill·o·ver S0640000 (spĭl′ō′vər)n.1. The act or an instance of spilling over.2. An amount or quantity spilled over.3. A side effect arising from or as if from an unpredicted source: Late trains were a spillover of increased ridership.spill•o•ver (ˈspɪlˌoʊ vər) n. 1. the act of spilling over. 2. a quantity of something spilled over; overflow. [1940–45] spilloverThe part of the laser spot that is not on the target because of beam divergence or standoff range, improper boresighting of laser designator, or poor operator illuminating procedures. See also laser spot.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | spillover - (economics) any indirect effect of public expenditureeconomic science, economics, political economy - the branch of social science that deals with the production and distribution and consumption of goods and services and their managementconsequence, effect, result, upshot, outcome, event, issue - a phenomenon that follows and is caused by some previous phenomenon; "the magnetic effect was greater when the rod was lengthwise"; "his decision had depressing consequences for business"; "he acted very wise after the event" | Translationsretombéetransfert sectorielspillover
spillover The part of the system noise (see sensitivity) of a radio telescope using a dish antenna that results from pick-up by the feed – the secondary antenna – from directions that do not intercept the reflecting surface of the dish.spillover[′spil‚ō·vər] (communications) The receiving of a radio signal of a different frequency from that to which the receiver is tuned, due to broad tuning characteristics. (meteorology) That part of orographic precipitation which is carried along by the wind so that it reaches the ground in the nominal rain shadow on the lee side of the barrier. FinancialSeeExternalityspillover
Words related to spillovernoun (economics) any indirect effect of public expenditureRelated Words- economic science
- economics
- political economy
- consequence
- effect
- result
- upshot
- outcome
- event
- issue
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