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liquidity
[ li-kwid-i-tee ]
liquidity
/ lɪˈkwɪdɪtɪ /
noun
- the possession of sufficient liquid assets to discharge current liabilities
- the state or quality of being liquid
liquidity
- The condition of having enough money on hand to meet financial obligations without having to sell fixed assets , such as machinery or equipment.
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Word History and Origins
Origin of liquidity1
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Example Sentences
“During its tenure, the Ahmadinejad government has increased liquidity by more than 600 percent,” adds Zahedi.
But in these times of austerity, it may not have that kind of liquidity lying around.
With liquidity so low, share prices began to wildly fluctuate.
As banks began to face liquidity tightening in early 2007, discretion became the name of the game in the rate-fixing gambit.
There's the John Maynard Keynes character arguing for fiscal stimulus to jolt the economy out of a liquidity trap.
The object of this is to keep the honey in a certain state of liquidity, by preventing the evaporation of the water it contains.
The Andalusian showed in her coy yet open air, in her small, broad hand and foot, in a languorous liquidity of eye.
The motion of liquidity which the surfaces possessed before contact is now checked, and the pieces of ice freeze together.
Cones built of lava vary in form according to the liquidity of the lava.
In many a place, criminals are the only ones who have any liquidity at all.
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