Slump in a sentence as a noun

You told me you were going to lead the UK out of a slump and you didn’t.

Hope HP can innovate their way out of the current slump.

Do not want to slump domestic engineer wages?

A few months after he arrived, I had a slump and the cycle repeated itself.

Then I started debating and found out I was pretty good at that, but it wasn't enough to pull me out of my slump.

Slump in a sentence as a verb

If they quit buying that stuff, then it's going to harm American businesses, and the economy is going to go into a slump.

For the developing world this means a slump in growth until a more educated generation grows up, for the developed world, it means slow job creation.

Low slump mixes tend to have proportionally shorter working times making traffic delays or delays on the construction site lead to higher waste by the mixer truck load.

When Germany entered an economic slump after the Euro-introduction in 2002, companies loathed hiring on permanent positions.

However, during the 1990s, the 'savings surplus', once the indispensable fuel for high-speed growth, became a serious, structural impediment, leading to a severe slump in demand and causing a heavy drag on Japan's economic recovery.

Slump definitions

noun

a noticeable deterioration in performance or quality; "the team went into a slump"; "a gradual slack in output"; "a drop-off in attendance"; "a falloff in quality"

See also: slack drop-off falloff

noun

a long-term economic state characterized by unemployment and low prices and low levels of trade and investment

See also: depression

verb

assume a drooping posture or carriage

See also: slouch

verb

fall or sink heavily; "He slumped onto the couch"; "My spirits sank"

See also: sink

verb

fall heavily or suddenly; decline markedly; "The real estate market fell off"

See also: sink

verb

go down in value; "the stock market corrected"; "prices slumped"

See also: decline correct