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Definition of boom noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

boom

noun
 
/buːm/
 
/buːm/
Idioms
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    in business/economy

  1. a sudden increase in trade and economic activity; a period of wealth and success
    • Living standards improved rapidly during the post-war boom.
    • boom in something a boom in car sales
    • a boom year (for trade, exports, etc.)
    • a property/housing boom
    Collocations The economyThe economyManaging the economy
    • handle/​run/​manage the economy
    • boost investment/​spending/​employment/​growth
    • stimulate demand/​the economy/​industry
    • cut/​reduce investment/​spending/​borrowing
    • reduce/​curb/​control/​keep down inflation
    • create/​fuel growth/​demand/​a boom/​a bubble
    • encourage/​foster/​promote/​stimulate/​stifle innovation/​competition
    • encourage/​work with/​compete with the private sector
    • increase/​boost/​promote US/​agricultural exports
    • ban/​restrict/​block cheap/​foreign imports
    • the economy grows/​expands/​shrinks/​contracts/​slows (down)/recovers/​improves/​is booming
    • enjoy an economic/​housing/​property boom
    Economic problems
    • push up/​drive up prices/​costs/​inflation
    • damage/​hurt/​destroy industry/​the economy
    • cause/​lead to/​go into/​avoid/​escape recession
    • experience/​suffer a recession/​downturn
    • fight/​combat inflation/​deflation/​unemployment
    • cause/​create inflation/​poverty/​unemployment
    • create/​burst a housing/​stock market bubble
    • cause/​trigger a stock market crash/​the collapse of the banking system
    • face/​be plunged into a financial/​an economic crisis
    • be caught in/​experience cycles of boom and bust
    Public finance
    • cut/​reduce/​slash/​increase/​double the defence/​education/​aid budget
    • increase/​boost/​slash/​cut public spending
    • increase/​put up/​raise/​cut/​lower/​reduce taxes
    • raise/​cut/​lower/​reduce interest rates
    • ease/​loosen/​tighten monetary policy
    • balance the (state/​federal) budget
    • achieve/​maintain a balanced budget
    • run a ($4 trillion) budget deficit/​surplus
    • impose taxes/​austerity measures
    compare slump see also baby boom
    Extra Examples
    • The boom was fuelled by accelerated demand for consumer products.
    • a boom in house prices
    • a boom in real estate
    • the ordinary business cycle of boom and bust
    Topics Successc1, Moneyc1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • great
    • post-war
    • consumer
    verb + boom
    • cause
    • create
    • fuel
    boom + noun
    • period
    • time
    • year
    preposition
    • during a/​the boom
    • in a/​the boom
    • boom in
    phrases
    • boom and bust
    See full entry
  2. popular period

  3. [usually singular] a period when something such as a sport or a type of music suddenly becomes very popular and successful
    • The only way to satisfy the golf boom was to build more courses.
    Topics Successc1
  4. on boat

  5. a long pole that the bottom of a sail is attached to and that you move to change the position of the sailTopics Transport by waterc2
  6. sound

  7. [usually singular] a loud deep sound
    • the distant boom of the guns
    Extra Examples
    • The deep boom of a foghorn echoed across the bay.
    • The deafening boom of the explosion was heard up to 10 kilometres away.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective
    • big
    • loud
    • deep
    verb + boom
    • hear
    boom + verb
    • echo
    preposition
    • with a boom
    See full entry
  8. see also sonic boom

    in river/harbour

  9. a floating barrier that is placed across a river or the entrance to a harbour to prevent ships or other objects from coming in or going out
  10. for microphone

  11. a long pole that carries a microphone or other equipment
  12. Word Originnoun sense 4 late Middle English (as a verb): ultimately imitative; perhaps from Dutch bommen ‘to hum, buzz’. noun senses 1 to 2 late 19th cent. (originally US): probably from boom ‘a loud sound’. noun sense 3 and noun senses 5 to 6 mid 16th cent. (in the general sense ‘beam, pole’): from Dutch, ‘beam, tree, pole’; related to beam.
Idioms
boom and bust
  1. a situation in which a period of rapid economic growth is followed by one of sudden decline
    • High house prices encourage boom and bust and leave the economy vulnerable.
    • Amid the inevitable boom and bust cycle, families are facing pay cuts and job losses.
    Topics Moneyc2
See boom in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee boom in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
dizzy
adjective
 
 
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