Amortise in a sentence as a verb

Which is exactly what you would get if you amortise those capital gains over the ten years.

It allows them to amortise porting efforts with sales on multiple platforms.

With that sort of investment, no wonder the pressure to amortise capital costs pushes the prices up.

All the pricing proposals by AWS include clear references to it, and amortise the cost over the life of the plan.

Surely Asus make enough laptops to amortise the cost of designing a decent trackpad over them?

I guess GroupOn could have tried to amortise the customer acquisition costs, but that would be hugely speculative.

Not a farmer but I imagine better amortise the cost of machinery, better optimise a process when done at scale.

Photon noise can be amortised by a number of different processes which aren't applicable to the case I was trying illustrate.

You can't amortise diffraction errors by longer exposure or better photon capture.

If she put fourteen businesses on one account to amortise the cost among them, then she is responsible for linking them together, not GoDaddy.

In contrast, program specific correctness proofs are typically of comparable difficulty, but don't amortise in this way. Therefore it seems to be cheaper in the long run, to focus on the correctness of optimising compilers.

Digital currency can self amortise as it never leaves the ledger, allowing effective negative interest rates to turn the momentary policy crazy dial way past 11.

That might apply in a league where you can amortise that loss over a whole bunch of games but in a single-shot knockout game, I'd expect a professional team to keep fighting even at 5-0 down - much as the Brazilians did in the second half.

If you don't have copyright, or some other economic tool, to amortise the huge sunk cost over a similarly huge audience, then you can't afford to make the work in the first place and the fact that the marginal cost of physical reproduction/redistribution is now near zero doesn't help you.

As the pace of Moore's law diminishes, learning through reverse engineering will become increasingly effective, as me-too products will have a larger market window to amortise reverse-engineering efforts before the next new thing comes along... Even a modest deceleration of Moore's law can have a dramatic effect: a five per cent reduction in the pace of gate-length shrinkage -- from 16 percent to 11 per cent per year -- increases the available time to develop products within a technology generation by 50 per cent, from two years up to three... Instead of running in fear of ­obsolescence, open-source hardware developers now have time to build communities around platforms; we can learn from each other, share blueprints and iterate prototypes before committing to a final design.”

Amortise definitions

verb

liquidate gradually

See also: amortize