spillover

英['spɪləʊvə(r)] 美['spɪloʊvər]
  • n. 溢出;外流人口;意外效果;影响
Noun:
  1. (economics) any indirect effect of public expenditure

1. Spillover damage from the building's demolition was confined to some broken glass.
拆除这座大楼带来的损失仅仅是一些玻璃被震碎了。

来自柯林斯例句

2. A second room was needed for the spillover of staff and reporters.
还需要一个房间给没有安置的员工和记者。

来自《权威词典》

3. Other resorts could benefit from the spillover of tourists.
其他度假胜地可以从游客带来的影响中间受益.

来自《简明英汉词典》

4. Some jobs are quite likely to have a negative spillover into family life.
有些工作很可能会对家庭生活产生不良影响。

来自柯林斯例句

5. There are opposite effects between the probability of merger and knowledge spillover.
而企业间兼并的概率和知识溢出成反比.

来自互联网

    用作名词 (n.)
    1. These new growth poles will generate positive spillover effects on the Bohai Rim Region and Western China.
      这些新的区域增长极,将对渤海湾地区和西部地区产生正面的溢出效应。
    2. This paper has analyzed the choice of innovation strategy from the perspective of technical spillover.
      本论文从技术溢出的角度分析了创新策略的选择。