Pronounce Yield as Y IY EH L D.
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to bow out
output, yield(noun)production of a certain amount
return, issue, take, takings, proceeds, yield, payoff(noun)the income or profit arising from such transactions as the sale of land or other property
"the average return was about 5%"
yield, fruit(noun)an amount of a product
output, yield, production(verb)the quantity of something (as a commodity) that is created (usually within a given period of time)
"production was up in the second quarter"
yield, give, afford(verb)be the cause or source of
"He gave me a lot of trouble"; "Our meeting afforded much interesting information"
give way, yield(verb)end resistance, as under pressure or force
"The door yielded to repeated blows with a battering ram"
render, yield, return, give, generate(verb)give or supply
"The cow brings in 5 liters of milk"; "This year's crop yielded 1,000 bushels of corn"; "The estate renders some revenue for the family"
concede, yield, cede, grant(verb)give over; surrender or relinquish to the physical control of another
yield, relent, soften(verb)give in, as to influence or pressure
move over, give way, give, ease up, yield(verb)move in order to make room for someone for something
"The park gave way to a supermarket"; "`Move over,' he told the crowd"
give, yield(verb)cause to happen or be responsible for
"His two singles gave the team the victory"
concede, yield, grant(verb)be willing to concede
"I grant you this much"
succumb, yield(verb)be fatally overwhelmed
yield, pay, bear(verb)bring in
"interest-bearing accounts"; "How much does this savings certificate pay annually?"
give, yield(verb)be flexible under stress of physical force
"This material doesn't give"
yield(verb)cease opposition; stop fighting
yield, give in, succumb, knuckle under, buckle under(verb)consent reluctantly
an increase usually measured in money that comes from labor, business, or propertythe stock's yield has increased over the years
something produced by physical or intellectual effortwheat farmers were able to increase the yield per acre substantially
the total amount collected or obtained especially at one timethe yield from the police department's buyback program for firearms was staggering
to give up and cease resistance (as to a liking, temptation, or habit)I finally yielded to temptation and had a bowl of ice cream
to produce as revenueI expect that stock to yield at least 14% profit this year
to cease resistance (as to another's arguments, demands, or control)after initially balking at the order, the soldier yielded when the commanding officer threatened a formal charge of insubordination
to be the cause of (a situation, action, or state of mind)the sort of embarrassing question that seldom yields an honest answer
to fall down or in as a result of physical pressurethe door soon yielded to the battering ram
to give (something) over to the control or possession of another usually under duressrefusing to yield the city to enemy troops
to give (oneself) over to something especially unrestrainedlyshe yielded herself to temptation and booked a month-long vacation in the Bahamas like she'd wanted to for years
You must not yield to temptation.
The yield on the bond is 6%.
A 6% yield is guaranteed on the investment.
They obtained a yield of 8
Stock investments do not always yield profit.