fiyatlarda düşme korkusu

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التركية - الإنجليزية
panic
To feel overwhelming fear
{a} violent without due cause, groundless
What a mother goes thru when the darn wind-up swing stops
be overcome by a sudden fear; "The students panicked when told that final exams were less than a week away"
What a mother goes through when the darn wind-up swing stops
be overcome by a sudden fear; "The students panicked when told that final exams were less than a week away
An unrecoverable system failure explicitly triggered by the kernel with a call to panic See also kernel crash
sudden mass fear and anxiety over anticipated events; "panic in the stock market"; "a war scare"; "a bomb scare led them to evacuate the building"
Extreme or sudden and causeless; unreasonable; - - said of fear or fright; as, panic fear, terror, alarm
a sudden and groundless fright; terror inspired by a trifling cause or a misapprehension of danger; as, the troops were seized with a panic; they fled in a panic
Panic is a very strong feeling of anxiety or fear, which makes you act without thinking carefully. An earthquake hit the capital, causing panic among the population I phoned the doctor in a panic, crying that I'd lost the baby
By extension: A sudden widespread fright or apprehension concerning financial affairs
is acute and extreme anxiety with accompanying physiologic symptoms
Financial and economic crisis, marked by public loss of confidence in the financial structure characterized by runs on banks and a rapid fall of the securities market, bank failures and bankruptcies See Depression (Economic)
cause sudden fear in or fill with sudden panic; "The mere thought of an isolation cell panicked the prisoners"
The state where an unrecoverable error has occurred Usually, when a panic occurs, a message is displayed on the console to indicate the cause of the problem
an overwhelming feeling of fear and anxiety
Acute, intense attack of anxiety associated with personality disorganization; the anxiety is overwhelming and accompanied by feelings of impending doom
If you panic or if someone panics you, you suddenly feel anxious or afraid, and act quickly and without thinking carefully. Guests panicked and screamed when the bomb exploded The unexpected and sudden memory briefly panicked her She refused to be panicked into a hasty marriage. panicked panicking to suddenly feel so frightened that you cannot think clearly or behave sensibly, or to make someone do this. In economics, a severe financial disturbance, such as widespread bank failures, feverish stock speculation followed by a market crash, or a climate of fear caused by economic crisis or anticipation of such a crisis. The term is applied only to the initial, violent stage of financial upheaval rather than the whole decline in the business cycle (see depression and recession). Until the 19th century, economic fluctuations were largely connected with shortages of goods, market expansion, and speculation (as in the South Sea Bubble). Panics in the industrialized societies of the 19th-20th centuries have reflected the increasing complexity of advanced economies. The Panic of 1857 in the U.S. had its seeds in the railroads' defaulting on their bonds and in the decline in the value of railroad securities; its effects were complex, including not only the closing of many banks but also severe unemployment in the U.S. and a money-market panic in Europe. The Panic of 1873, which began with financial crises in Vienna and New York, marked the start of a long-term contraction in the world economy. The most infamous panic began with the U.S. stock-market crash of 1929 (see Great Depression)
Son of Ares Brother of Eris (Discord), Trembling, Phobos (Alarm), Metus (Fear), Demios (Dread), and Pallor
fiyatlarda düşme korkusu
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