drive sth up

drive sth up
UK US drive sth up
Phrasal Verb with drive({{}}/draɪv/ verb [T] (drove, driven)
FINANCE to force a price, value, etc. to go up: »

Cool and wet weather drove up corn and soybean futures prices.


Financial and business terms. 2012.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • drive sth down — UK US drive sth down Phrasal Verb with drive({{}}/draɪv/ verb [T] (drove, driven) ► FINANCE to force a price, value, etc. to go down: »The company s primary concern was to increase competition and drive down prices …   Financial and business terms

  • drive sth into the ground — drive/run/work sth into the ground ► to use something so much that it breaks or stops working: »They decided to run the car into the ground instead of changing it. Main Entry: ↑ground …   Financial and business terms

  • drive sth out of sth — UK US drive sb/sth out (of sth) Phrasal Verb with drive({{}}/draɪv/ verb [T] (drove, driven) ► to force someone or something to leave or stop doing something: »Critics say the company is trying to drive out competition and charge high royalties.… …   Financial and business terms

  • drive sth out — UK US drive sb/sth out (of sth) Phrasal Verb with drive({{}}/draɪv/ verb [T] (drove, driven) ► to force someone or something to leave or stop doing something: »Critics say the company is trying to drive out competition and charge high royalties.… …   Financial and business terms

  • drive something home (to somebody) — drive sth ˈhome (to sb) idiom to make sb understand or accept sth by saying it often, loudly, angrily, etc • You will really need to drive your point home. Main entry: ↑driveidiom …   Useful english dictionary

  • drive something up — ˌdrive sthˈup/ˈdown derived to make sth such as prices rise or fall quickly Main entry: ↑drivederived …   Useful english dictionary

  • drive something down — ˌdrive sthˈup/ˈdown derived to make sth such as prices rise or fall quickly Main entry: ↑drivederived …   Useful english dictionary

  • drive — drive1 W1S1 [draıv] v past tense drove [drəuv US drouv] past participle driven [ˈdrıvən] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(vehicle)¦ 2¦(make somebody move)¦ 3¦(make somebody do something)¦ 4¦(make somebody/something be in a bad state)¦ 5¦(hit/push something into… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • drive — 1 /draIv/ verb past tense drove, past participle driven / drIvFn/ 1 OPERATE A VEHICLE (I, T) to sit in a car, bus etc and make it travel from one place to another: Do you drive? | She drove the pick up and got our supplies. 2 TRAVEL SOMEWHERE (I …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • drive somebody out (of something) — ˌdrive sb/sthˈout (of sth) derived to make sb/sth disappear or stop doing sth • New fashions drive out old ones. • The supermarkets are driving small shopkeepers out of business. Main entry: ↑drivederived …   Useful english dictionary

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