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 realize ['rɪə`laɪz]   添加此单词到默认生词本
vt. 了解, 实现, 使显得逼真, 变卖

vi. 变卖

[经] 实现, 变现




    realize
    [ verb ]
    1. be fully aware or cognizant of

    2. <verb.cognition> agnise agnize realise recognise recognize
    3. perceive (an idea or situation) mentally

    4. <verb.cognition>
      realise see understand
      Now I see!
      I just can't see your point
      Does she realize how important this decision is?
      I don't understand the idea
    5. make real or concrete; give reality or substance to

    6. <verb.creation>
      actualise actualize realise substantiate
      our ideas must be substantiated into actions
    7. earn on some commercial or business transaction; earn as salary or wages

    8. <verb.possession>
      bring in clear earn gain make pull in realise take in
      How much do you make a month in your new job?
      She earns a lot in her new job
      this merger brought in lots of money
      He clears $5,000 each month
    9. convert into cash; of goods and property

    10. <verb.possession>
      realise
    11. expand or complete (a part in a piece of baroque music) by supplying the harmonies indicated in the figured bass

    12. <verb.creation>
      realise


    Realize \Re"al*ize\ (r[=e]"al*[imac]z), v. t. [imp. & p. p.
    {Realized} (-[imac]zd); p. pr. & vb. n. {Realizing}
    (-[imac]`z[i^]ng).] [Cf. F. r['e]aliser.]
    1. To make real; to convert from the imaginary or fictitious
    into the actual; to bring into concrete existence; to
    effectuate; to accomplish; as, to realize a scheme or
    project.

    We realize what Archimedes had only in hypothesis,
    weighing a single grain against the globe of earth.
    --Glanvill.

    2. To cause to seem real; to impress upon the mind as actual;
    to feel vividly or strongly; to make one's own in
    apprehension or experience.

    Many coincidences . . . soon begin to appear in them
    [Greek inscriptions] which realize ancient history
    to us. --Jowett.

    We can not realize it in thought, that the object .
    . . had really no being at any past moment. --Sir W.
    Hamilton.

    3. To convert into real property; to make real estate of; as,
    to realize his fortune.

    4. To acquire as an actual possession; to obtain as the
    result of plans and efforts; to gain; to get; as, to
    realize large profits from a speculation.

    Knighthood was not beyond the reach of any man who
    could by diligent thrift realize a good estate.
    --Macaulay.

    5. To convert into actual money; as, to realize assets.


    Realize \Re"al*ize\, v. i.
    To convert any kind of property into money, especially
    property representing investments, as shares in stock
    companies, bonds, etc.

    Wary men took the alarm, and began to realize, a word
    now first brought into use to express the conversion of
    ideal property into something real. --W. Irving.

    1. Moreover, many investors simply don't realize they hold junk-bond funds.
    2. The company said it undertook the plan to "enable the stockholders to better realize the full potential value" of the company's shares, which management feels are undervalued in the marketplace.
    3. "I'm afraid this is going to attract every little thief within 100 miles around here when they realize we don't have a police department," Seals said.
    4. "All of us realize the more revenue we have in this bill, the less likely the president is to sign it," said Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., manager of the Senate tax measure.
    5. Most think that Europeans realize they must make changes to compete against the Japanese and the U.S.
    6. I think that's why it was very hard to realize that it was closing.
    7. A lot of them know that the Post-it notes on their desk come from 3M, but don't realize that the company makes more than 50,000 other products as well, 3M admits.
    8. It's hard to describe, but once you get to fooling with them, you realize they are very responsive birds.
    9. The Securities and Exchange Commission appears likely to realize only $87 million of the $100 million it expected from Ivan F. Boesky to settle civil insider-trading charges.
    10. A mutual fund, in contrast, can realize capital gains anytime and pass them on to holders without notice, thereby reducing the fund's net asset value and leaving holders with a tax liability.
    11. "We realize that President Bush and many members of Congress are supporting the extension of the restraint agreement in the fall of 1989, but they have the time now to rethink and modify the program before it is too late," Laffer said.
    12. The result is that single currency may take longer to realize than originally hoped, though leaders agreed that treaty should be completed by December.
    13. "People have discounted Wednesday's performance because they realize it was overdone," one equity salesman said.
    14. "I didn't realize the Congress works so slowly to make policy," said Miroslaw Luczka, a member of the Polish senate's investigations bureau in Warsaw.
    15. He wants to control oil markets to realize political aims that go far beyond economic power.
    16. Rogerson, who lives in Bangor, said he had been hunting in the woods behind Mrs. Wood's suburban Hermon home for some time the day of the killing and didn't realize how near he was to her home.
    17. Company officials and industry analysts cautiously predicted improved earnings in 1990 as Kodak begins to realize savings from the restructuring.
    18. Martin Marietta Corp. said Tuesday the company will realize about $140 million in after-tax profits from the sale of its interest in a London-based computer services company.
    19. Already, some administration officials are privately expressing fear that too much talk about big tax cuts now could create a backlash when voters realize how small such cuts are likely to be.
    20. Mr. Develle says the only "real solution is a recession," but he and others realize that the U.S. administration and congress will be doing everything possible to avoid one before the 1988 presidential election.
    21. In the end, both ABC and Special Olympics, the show's host, hope to realize separate goals: ABC gets a low-cost _ about $650,000 _ holiday special to compete with NBC's "The Cosby Show."
    22. Ridings said she did not realize at the time that the meeting might have violated the law.
    23. "I just didn't realize he was such a big cheese," she said.
    24. He must also realize that should he use chemical or biological weapons, there will be the most severe consequences," Baker said.
    25. Medical rationing looms as a dominant health care issue of the 1990s, as Americans realize after decades of revolutionary medical advances that there are no miracles, just hard choices.
    26. Cox said. "They don't realize how popular they are." Most of the men and women who played the Munchkins were recruited by two troupes of vaudeville midgets headed by Leo Singer and Major Doyle.
    27. He didn't realize there is no statute of limitations for murder.
    28. The alleged motive was to maximize the gain GAF would realize from the sale of its stake in Carbide.
    29. The triumph of this novel is that Mr. Malouf manages to realize a complex, nuanced portrait of the "other" histories of Vic and Digger's lives that is at once compelling, convincing and utterly without condescension.
    30. "The prime minister did not realize this inevitable slowness when he gave the date of Aug. 31, and he cannot keep that promise. We think the government could be presented to the Sejm before Sept. 10," Geremek said.
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