Betekenis van:
shun

to shun
Werkwoord
  • verjagen; uit een groep of gemeenschap
  • expel from a community or group

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

to shun
Werkwoord
  • doodverklaren
  • expel from a community or group

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

to shun
Werkwoord
  • schuwen
  • avoid and stay away from deliberately; stay clear of

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen

to shun
Werkwoord
  • deballoteren
  • expel from a community or group

Synoniemen

Hyperoniemen


Voorbeeldzinnen

  1. Shun will take over my job while I'm away.
  2. Kunshan An Shun Pettechs Fibre Industry Co. Ltd.
  3. Deqing An Shun Pettechs Fibre Industry Co. Ltd.
  4. Hangzhou An Shun Pettechs Fibre Industry Co. Ltd.
  5. So consumers did not shun the Cancer pagurus crab in the early months of 2000, and nothing indicates that things were any different for the spider crab over the same period.
  6. The article goes on to point out the yield difference between investment grade bonds and junk bonds, concluding that ‘this indicates that investors continue to shun low-grade corporate bonds, expanding the spread between high-credited bonds and the so-called junk bonds to their widest margin’.
  7. In February 2001, in an article in the Korea Herald [46], another market expert stated that: ‘Given the fact that credit risk is still pronounced and haunting investors, I don't think fluent capital will flow into corporate bonds rated below BBB+’. This coincides with the early period of the KEIC Guarantee and KDB Debenture Programme. The article goes on to point out the yield difference between investment grade bonds and junk bonds, concluding that ‘this indicates that investors continue to shun low-grade corporate bonds, expanding the spread between high-credited bonds and the so-called junk bonds to their widest margin’.
  8. So consumers did not shun the Cancer pagurus crab in the early months of 2000, and nothing indicates that things were any different for the spider crab over the same period. (92) Therefore, although withdrawals in January 2000 rose by 92 % compared with January 1999 and rose by 28 % over the first half of that year, these withdrawals were not large in absolute terms. Nor is there any evidence to link this increase to the media coverage of the oil spill. Furthermore, the figures available to the Commission show that the large withdrawals recorded in January 2000 were of species such as spotted dogfish (from 11423 to 16362 kg), saithe (from 120 to 3727 kg) and plaice (from 51 to 1789 kg), species for which, given the way they are marketed, there is little or no link between increased withdrawals and the media coverage of the oil spill. And, according to Ofimer’s sectoral report for January-April 2000, withdrawals remained below 1,5 % of the quantities landed of the main species; individual withdrawals were reported for sea bass, anchovy and spider crab.