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near-term
[ neer-turm ]
adjective
- for, covering, or involving the very near future:
the near-term prospects for lower interest rates.
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of near-term1
Example Sentences
“With respect to possible tariffs, we are working across our supply chain, logistics network, and assembly plants so that we are prepared to mitigate near-term impacts,” she said during the call.
At the marketing organization Destination Vancouver, communications director Suzanne Walters said some U.S. groups “are putting a hold on their near-term events” in Vancouver — not because of tariffs but “because of job losses or cuts in government funding.”
I think he’s making moves with an eye toward mollifying an intensely vindictive president and thus improving the near-term fate of his other, much more prominent business ventures.
Of the different best to worst case scenarios outlined by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the relatively recent Pliocene epoch is indeed a fair proxy for the very optimistic scenario for the near-term future we face, Reichgelt explained.
The primary near-term goal appears to be staving off the expiration next year of the 2017 tax cuts, which disproportionately benefited corporations and the wealthy.
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