,| 1. | to give forth or produce by a natural process or in return for cultivation: This farm yields enough fruit to meet all our needs. |
| 2. | to produce or furnish (payment, profit, or interest): a trust fund that yields ten percent interest annually; That investment will yield a handsome return. |
| 3. | to give up, as to superior power or authority: They yielded the fort to the enemy. |
| 4. | to give up or surrender (oneself): He yielded himself to temptation. |
| 5. | to give up or over; relinquish or resign: to yield the floor to the senator from Ohio. |
| 6. | to give as due or required: to yield obedience. |
| 7. | to cause; give rise to: The play yielded only one good laugh. |
| 8. | to give a return, as for labor expended; produce; bear. |
| 9. | to surrender or submit, as to superior power: The rebels yielded after a week. |
| 10. | to give way to influence, entreaty, argument, or the like: Don't yield to their outrageous demands. |
| 11. | to give place or precedence (usually fol. by to): to yield to another; Will the senator from New York yield? |
| 12. | to give way to force, pressure, etc., so as to move, bend, collapse, or the like. |
| 13. | the act of yielding or producing. |
| 14. | something yielded. |
| 15. | the quantity or amount yielded. |
| 16. | Chemistry. the quantity of product formed by the interaction of two or more substances, generally expressed as a percentage of the quantity obtained to that theoretically obtainable. |
| 17. | the income produced by a financial investment, usually shown as a percentage of cost. |
| 18. | a measure of the destructive energy of a nuclear explosion, expressed in kilotons of the amount of TNT that would produce the same destruction. |

yield (yēld) v. yield·ed, yield·ing, yields v. tr.
[Middle English yielden, from Old English geldan, to pay.] yield'er n. Synonyms: These verbs all mean to give in to what one can no longer oppose or resist. Yield has the widest application: My neighbor won't yield to reason. "The child ... soon yielded to the drowsiness" (Charles Dickens). |
yield