单词 | payoff |
释义 | payoffpay·off /ˈpeɪɒf $ -ɒːf/ noun [countableC] 1 RESULTan advantage or profit that you get as a result of doing something 〔做某事之后的〕良好结果,好处 With electric cars there is a big environmental payoff. 使用电动汽车,环境会大有改善。 2 PAY FORGIVEa payment that is made to someone, often illegally, in order to stop them from causing you trouble 〔为收买某人而付的〕钱财,贿赂 → bribe Union leaders allegedly received huge payoffs from the company’s bosses. 据说工会领导收受了那家公司老板的巨额贿赂。 3 a payment made to someone when they are forced to leave their job 遣散费 → redundancy The average payoff to staff was about £2000. 员工的平均遣散费大约是2,000英镑。 Examples from the Corpus payoff• It was alleged that union leaders had received huge payoffs from the company's bosses.• Here the reward or payoff acts in a negative way and is a form of punishment.• Tax policy would be ruled by stubborn one-third minorities, many among them cruising for policy payoffs to drop their opposition.• Such switches between the two forms of reductionism have several payoffs.• The tavern payoff was in return for favors granted.• But companies will have to decide if the payoff is worth the effort.• What are your payoffs for letting these fears overcome you? From Longman Business Dictionary payoffpay·off /ˈpeɪɒf-ɒːf/ noun [countableC] 1a good result from a particular plan, project etc The company’s biggest payoff came in May when it made $18.4 million. This low-risk strategy promises a payoff regardless of what the stockmarket does. 2a payment made to someone in order to stop them causing trouble The company refused tomake thepayoff and complained to the authorities. |
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