to reduce losses

  • 1reduce — re‧duce [rɪˈdjuːs ǁ rɪˈduːs] verb [transitive] to make something less or smaller in price, amount, or size: • Jobs have been cut in order to reduce costs. • Prices have been reduced by 20%. reduce something (from something) to something …

    Financial and business terms

  • 2Net operating losses — Losses that a firm can take advantage of to reduce taxes. The New York Times Financial Glossary …

    Financial and business terms

  • 3net operating losses — losses that a firm can take advantage of to reduce taxes. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary …

    Financial and business terms

  • 4Other Losses — Other Losses: An Investigation into the Mass Deaths of German Prisoners at the Hands of the French and Americans after World War II   Author(s) …

    Wikipedia

  • 5cut your losses — cut (your) losses to stop doing something that is already failing in order to reduce the amount of time or money that is being wasted on it. I wasn t benefiting from the course and it was costing so much that I thought I d better cut my losses …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 6cut losses — cut (your) losses to stop doing something that is already failing in order to reduce the amount of time or money that is being wasted on it. I wasn t benefiting from the course and it was costing so much that I thought I d better cut my losses …

    New idioms dictionary

  • 7cut one's losses —    If you end or withdraw from something that is already failing, in order to reduce the loss of money, time or effort invested in it …

    English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • 8Transformer — This article is about the electrical device. For the toy line franchise, see Transformers. For other uses, see Transformer (disambiguation). Pole mounted distribution transformer with center tapped secondary winding. This type of transformer is… …

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  • 9Defence of the Reich — Part of Campaigns of World War II …

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  • 10Coaxial cable — RG 59 flexible coaxial cable composed of: A: outer plastic sheath B: woven copper shield C: inner dielectric insulator D: copper core Coaxial cable, or coax, has an inner conductor surrounded by a flexible, tubular insulating layer, surrounded by …

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