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cri·sis <-ses> [ˈkraɪsɪs, -si:z] N

1. crisis (critical situation):

crisis
kriza f
to be in crisis
crisis of confidence
energy crisis
a crisis situation

2. crisis (distress):

crisis
stiska f

cri·sis ˈman·age·ment N no pl

ˈoil cri·sis N

oil crisis

mid-life ˈcri·sis N

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Although it was at the centre of the subprime storm, the wider group has weathered the financial crisis of 20072010 better than other global banks.
en.wikipedia.org
He is suffering from no such mid-life crisis, he would want you to know.
www.thestar.com
Taxable values for properties within municipalities that are charged a tax have dropped due to the mortgage crisis, further decreasing local coffers.
en.wikipedia.org
The long postwar boom ended in the 1970s, amid the economic crises experienced following the 1973 oil crisis.
en.wikipedia.org
The crisis has challenged conventional thinking in financial sector policies and sparked debate on how best to achieve sustainable development.
en.wikipedia.org
The association considers overpopulation the primary cause of the humanitarian, environmental and energetic crisis of our planet.
en.wikipedia.org
Prior to the crisis, banks and other financial institutions had invested significant amounts of money in complicated financial assets, such as collateralized debt obligations and credit default swaps.
en.wikipedia.org
He married young and has no regrets, although by the third series he is suffering from a mid-life crisis.
en.wikipedia.org
The financial markets were destabilised, causing a severe economic crisis that led to rationing.
en.wikipedia.org
This has certainly been the dominant economic trend since the credit crisis of 2008 and, in some areas, even before then.
www.marketoracle.co.uk

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