释义 |
recession I. re·ces·sion \rə̇ˈseshən, rēˈ-\ noun (-s) Etymology: Latin recession-, recessio, from recessus (past participle of recedere to recede) + -ion-, -io -ion — more at recede 1. a. : the act or action of receding : retreat < the shy recession of a votary of love taking the veil — Rebecca West > < the recession of optimism — R.H.Bainton > b. : the appearance or effect of receding < flatten his figures by reducing their rounds and recessions to roughly the same plane — R.M.Coates > c. : a return procession (as of clergy and choir after a service) 2. : the receding or diminishing of a natural feature or the process by which such movement occurs: as a. : the upstream retreat of a waterfall b. : the retreat of an eroded escarpment c. : the melting back of a glacier d. : the landward movement of a shoreline undergoing erosion e. : the withdrawal of a body of water exposing formerly submerged areas to the air 3. : a period of reduced general economic activity marked by a decline in employment, profits, production, and sales that is not as severe or as prolonged as a depression II. re·cession \(ˈ)rē+\ noun Etymology: re- + cession : the act of ceding back : restoration < the recession of conquered territory > |