- 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.
Cool and wet weather drove up corn and soybean futures prices.
Financial and business terms. 2012.
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