Used in a Sentence

jevons

Definition, parts of speech, synonyms, and sentence examples for jevons.

Editorial note

The nineteenth-century English economist William Stanley Jevons noted that more fuel-efficient steam engines didn’t lead to less coal consumption.

Examples15
Definitions1
Parts of speech1

Quick take

A surname.

Meaning at a glance

The clearest senses and uses of jevons gathered in one view.

noun

A surname.

Definitions

Core meanings and parts of speech for jevons.

noun

A surname.

Example sentences

1

The nineteenth-century English economist William Stanley Jevons noted that more fuel-efficient steam engines didn’t lead to less coal consumption.

2

It joins a very few others, including the Law of Diminishing Returns and the Jevons Paradox.

3

As Jevons paradox [0] points out the more efficiently we use resources the more of them we tend to use.

4

This is called Jevons Paradox; or at least it used to be.

5

The English economist William Stanley Jevons made the same observation in 1865.

6

Somewhat fortunately for the likes of Google, then the Jevons paradox kicks in and people realize that if advertising becomes cheaper then it's profitable to buy more of it.

7

Induced demand, Jevons paradox, Parkinson's law...

8

Or I could just point you at the Jevons paradox.

9

Or maybe Jevons paradox applies here and the number of emails would go up to such an extent that the improved efficiency would not make up for the increased traffic.

10

Forget about the rights of indigenous people, agricultural productivity, water evaporation, environmental impact, the subsidies, the malls, Jevons paradox, Plan Puebla Panamá, etc.

11

No one dare even suggest that the economic rewards of cheaper energy be allocated in further promotion of environmental protection measures, or God forbid, compensation for the displaced, instead of fueling an imminent manifestation of Jevons Paradox, which would obliterate the thinly argued benefits of e.g.

Quote examples

1

Actually, the word "economics" was created to replace "political economy" by some of the most political of the economists like Jevons and Marshall.

Proper noun examples

1

But Jevons’s Complementarity Corollary, which follows naturally from Jevons’s paradox, predicts that improvements in information technology can lead to more demand for face-to-face contact, because face time complements time spent communicating electronically.

2

Improvements in information technology seem to have increased, rather than reduced, the value of face-to-face connections, which might be called Jevons’s Complementarity Corollary.

3

The article also mentioned Jevons’ paradox, which is something I didn't know had a name.

Frequently asked questions

Short answers drawn from the clearest meanings and examples for this word.

How do you use jevons in a sentence?

The nineteenth-century English economist William Stanley Jevons noted that more fuel-efficient steam engines didn’t lead to less coal consumption.

What does jevons mean?

A surname.

What part of speech is jevons?

jevons is commonly used as noun.