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Meaning of Haircut | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C1 Standard
ˈhɛə(ɹ)kʌt

Definitions

  1. The act of cutting of the hair, often done professionally by a barber, hair stylist, or beautician.
  2. The style into which the hair is cut.
  3. A partial loss, financially: thus, in a bankruptcy proceeding, the proportional reduction in the debt that will be paid to each creditor (based on an evaluation of the total debt owed and the total assets of the debtor); among investors, the negative return on investment from a losing proposition.
  4. The difference between the value of a loan and the value of its collateral.

Equivalents

Български подстригване
Čeština frizúra sestřih střih stříhání
Ελληνικά κούρεμα
Español corte corte de pelo
Français coupe
Gàidhlig cliop
עברית תספורת
Magyar hajvágás
Íslenska klipping
日本語 カット 刈り込み 散髪 理髪
한국어 머리깎기 산발 이발
Lietuvių kirpimas
Македонски потстрижување
Nederlands kapsel
Português corte
Română tundere tuns tunsoare
Русский стрижка
Svenska frisyr klippning
తెలుగు క్షౌరము
Українська стри́жка
Tiếng Việt cắt tóc hớt tóc

Examples

“to take a haircut”
“And he needs to make sure that any American bank that was involved in loans to Asia, and now wants to share in the I.M.F. bailout, takes a haircut. And I'm not just talking about a trim.”
“Its president, Nestor Kirchner, was expected to confirm overnight that about 75% of the country's bondholders had agreed to swap their old debt for new at a loss of up to 70 cents in the dollar—also a record and one that Mr Kirchner has called “the biggest haircut in history” for investors.”
“Something similar was happening at the same time in Greece. In the spring of 2012 Greece's public debt did, eventually, take a haircut, confirming that an unpayable debt will receive a haircut whatever the dogmas of European officials.”
“And there is a growing consensus that it is finally time for founders to swallow their pride, accept a huge haircut to valuation and help establish a new floor for their stock to start growing again, helping to encourage all the companies coming up behind them to do the same.”
“Government securities having high credit rating such as Treasury bonds and Treasury bills are usually subjected to 1% to 10% haircut, while for more risky, volatile or illiquid securities, such as a stock option, the haircut might be as high as 30%.”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
See all C1 English words →

See also

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