English language

How to pronounce persistency in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms doggedness, perseverance, persistence, pertinacity, tenaciousness, tenacity
Type of determination, purpose
Derivation persist, persistent

Examples of persistency

persistency
Data persistency is routinely 5% while video persistency can easily reach 50%.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Strong persistency and NIW resulted in a 41 percent increase in flow risk in force.
From the foxbusiness.com
China is not solely to blame for North Korea's belligerency and persistency.
From the economist.com
Surprisingly, there is no general agreement among investigators concerning persistency.
From the curiouscapitalist.blogs.time.com
The issue of portable persistency might have ended with Davis'signature.
From the sacbee.com
Most investigators and writers deny the role of past performance in indicating persistency.
From the curiouscapitalist.blogs.time.com
Flow persistency increased to 83 percent from 78 percent a year ago.
From the foxbusiness.com
But, that is coinciding also with some good economic numbers that are showing some persistency.
From the forbes.com
Emerson is astute when he observes that the characteristic of true heroism is in its persistency.
From the denverpost.com
More examples
  • Doggedness: persistent determination
  • The state of being persistent; A measure of how much something persists
  • The percentage of policies that remain in force and have not lapsed. The higher the persistency for an insurer, the better the retention of business.
  • A term which references the continuation of a customer relationship with a company. Higher persistency rates are indicative of lower customer turn-over and therefore, higher customer retention.
  • The essence of the substance. While everything in the universe seems to be changing, among the changing tides there is a persistent principle, a central rule, which does not vary with space and time.^[1]
  • The degree to which policies stay in force through the continued payment of renewal premiums.
  • (JP 1-02, NATO) - In biological or chemical warfare, the characteristics of an agent which pertains to the duration of its effectiveness under determined conditions after its dispersal. See FM 3-9.
  • A term used to refer to the length of time insurance remains continuously in force.
  • The tendency or likelihood of insurance business not lapsing or being replaced by another insurer's product; an important underwriting factor.