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单词 rollback
释义

Definition of rollback in English:

rollback

noun ˈrəʊlbakˈroʊlˌbæk
  • 1North American A reduction or decrease.

    〈主美〉回降;削减

    a 5 per cent rollback of personal income taxes

    个人所得税回降5%。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Among the conservation rollbacks is an attack on the Roadless Area Conservation Rule, issued by President Clinton shortly before he left office.
    • It also implies a potential rollback of many aspects of economic liberalisation.
    • Fortunately, the global public appears to be bracing itself for rollbacks.
    • The administration is using its power and authority to accomplish the biggest rollback in employee rights in more than half a century.
    • The fee rollback will lead to a $7.5 billion widening of the state deficit over the next year and a half, according to Moody's.
    • The economy has created a wave of wealth that, despite the recent rollbacks of big stock market gains, has spilled over into a wider demographic.
    • The construction unions were using their pension funds, which own 5 million shares of Kroger stock, to help fellow unionists draw a line in the sand against health-care rollbacks.
    • The 1990s saw a rollback in government regulation at the same time as rapid growth in information technology.
    • With the 2005 budget process about to begin, the betting is that the LDP will look for compromise on the rollback of the 1999 tax breaks.
    • Even friends of labor such as the Social Democrat are backing cuts in unemployment benefits and rollbacks in worker protections.
    • We are not suggesting that the strike actions undertaken by organised labour over the past half-year implies a complete rollback of the economic liberalisation of the past twenty years.
    • They have their own de facto border controls, laws, and an 80,000-strong army, and will be loath to permit any rollback of their autonomy.
    • Emboldened by these developments, corporations began a rollback of worker gains.
    • With this rollback of government, corporate involvement in daily life began to increase dramatically, and brands reached into the public sphere as never before.
    • This is being called a victory because there weren't rollbacks.
    • The key provisions include limits on unemployment benefits and rollbacks of some regulations that make it difficult to fire workers.
    • These suggest that voters in core Europe may finally be willing to accept rollbacks in the cherished welfare state to get the region's stagnant economy rolling again.
    • There would be a rollback of tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans to pay for healthcare and other social programs.
    • The economic downturn has cast a pall over CEO compensation, but that doesn't mean that CEO pay cuts or rollbacks are in the offing.
    • The posturing calls in Congress for rollbacks in federal fuel taxes will die out, as will the ad hoc consumer protests.
    Synonyms
    reduction, cut, decrease, retrenchment, trimming, salami slicing
  • 2Computing
    The process of restoring a database or program to a previously defined state, typically to recover from an error.

    〔计算机〕还原,回退

    Example sentencesExamples
    • You may be thinking this process is complicated, but using transactional rollbacks actually is rather easy.
    • Modeling tables inside of your object means you also have to create a decent locking mechanism, complete with commits and rollbacks - something that most programmers are equipped to do.
verbˈrəʊlbakˈroʊlˌbæk
[with object]Computing
  • Restore (a database) to a previously defined state.

    〔计算机〕还原,回退

Definition of rollback in US English:

rollback

nounˈroʊlˌbækˈrōlˌbak
  • 1North American A reduction or decrease.

    〈主美〉回降;削减

    a 5 percent rollback of personal income taxes

    个人所得税回降5%。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • With the 2005 budget process about to begin, the betting is that the LDP will look for compromise on the rollback of the 1999 tax breaks.
    • This is being called a victory because there weren't rollbacks.
    • The posturing calls in Congress for rollbacks in federal fuel taxes will die out, as will the ad hoc consumer protests.
    • We are not suggesting that the strike actions undertaken by organised labour over the past half-year implies a complete rollback of the economic liberalisation of the past twenty years.
    • The construction unions were using their pension funds, which own 5 million shares of Kroger stock, to help fellow unionists draw a line in the sand against health-care rollbacks.
    • It also implies a potential rollback of many aspects of economic liberalisation.
    • Even friends of labor such as the Social Democrat are backing cuts in unemployment benefits and rollbacks in worker protections.
    • Emboldened by these developments, corporations began a rollback of worker gains.
    • The economy has created a wave of wealth that, despite the recent rollbacks of big stock market gains, has spilled over into a wider demographic.
    • The key provisions include limits on unemployment benefits and rollbacks of some regulations that make it difficult to fire workers.
    • These suggest that voters in core Europe may finally be willing to accept rollbacks in the cherished welfare state to get the region's stagnant economy rolling again.
    • Among the conservation rollbacks is an attack on the Roadless Area Conservation Rule, issued by President Clinton shortly before he left office.
    • They have their own de facto border controls, laws, and an 80,000-strong army, and will be loath to permit any rollback of their autonomy.
    • There would be a rollback of tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans to pay for healthcare and other social programs.
    • The fee rollback will lead to a $7.5 billion widening of the state deficit over the next year and a half, according to Moody's.
    • The 1990s saw a rollback in government regulation at the same time as rapid growth in information technology.
    • With this rollback of government, corporate involvement in daily life began to increase dramatically, and brands reached into the public sphere as never before.
    • Fortunately, the global public appears to be bracing itself for rollbacks.
    • The administration is using its power and authority to accomplish the biggest rollback in employee rights in more than half a century.
    • The economic downturn has cast a pall over CEO compensation, but that doesn't mean that CEO pay cuts or rollbacks are in the offing.
    Synonyms
    reduction, cut, decrease, retrenchment, trimming, salami slicing
    1. 1.1 A reversion to a previous state or situation.
      a rollback to conditions not seen since the open shop days of the 1930s
      Example sentencesExamples
      • ‘Emissions rollbacks are being handed out to industries like candy,’ says the former director of regulatory enforcement for the EPA.
      • The change is a major policy rollback by the administration and represents a sharp split with the country's governing council.
      • Another rollback began, however, in 1874, when the Republican state legislature abolished ward elections for the San Francisco school board, and insisted that all board members be elected at large.
  • 2Computing
    The process of restoring a database or program to a previously defined state, typically to recover from an error.

    〔计算机〕还原,回退

    Example sentencesExamples
    • You may be thinking this process is complicated, but using transactional rollbacks actually is rather easy.
    • Modeling tables inside of your object means you also have to create a decent locking mechanism, complete with commits and rollbacks - something that most programmers are equipped to do.
verbˈroʊlˌbækˈrōlˌbak
[with object]Computing
  • Restore (a database) to a previously defined state.

    〔计算机〕还原,回退

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更新时间:2024/9/19 10:03:49