English language

How to pronounce spillover in English?

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Type Words
Type of issue, outcome, result, consequence, upshot, effect, event

Examples of spillover

spillover
Our concern was the spillover effect on the customer because of the image issue.
From the latimes.com
The house's guest wing acts as a spillover option for families on busy weekends.
From the couriermail.com.au
We have seen that the spillover effect of the financial sector is quite limited.
From the economist.com
My edits to the English Wikipedia, at first, were spillover, from my work there.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Low-slung jeans gave even the skinniest women an unsightly muffin top spillover.
From the sacbee.com
In the United States, there's a growing unease about the potential for spillover.
From the signonsandiego.com
Ms. Pugh said the 10-minute fight was the spillover from an argument yesterday.
From the post-gazette.com
The stories are also concerned with the spillover of fantasy life into reality.
From the guardian.co.uk
I do think that the anger directed toward the big banks had a spillover effect.
From the businessweek.com
More examples
  • (economics) any indirect effect of public expenditure
  • Satellite signal that falls on locations outside the beam pattern's defined edge of coverage.
  • The benefit of a program intervention that accrues to individuals or organizations that are not direct recipients of the program's outputs. (EAO, Toolkit 2003, chapter 9. California Framework 2004, p. 441.)
  • A positive externality. The term is often used to refer to the transmission of an advanced technology from a foreign-owned firm (thus FDI) to domestic firms.
  • Spillover from an MPA accounts for two types of movements outside the MPA: (1) adults and juvenile animals swim into adjacent areas, and (2) young animals and eggs can drift out from the MPA into the surrounding waters.
  • Recording of radiations of a particular type or energy in channels of the multi-channel analyzer beyond their designated region of interest
  • That part of the power radiated by a feed not intercepted by the secondary radiator.
  • The duplication of wage and benefit increases for nonunion and management personnel that an employer provides as a result of negotiated union increases.
  • Another name for an externality.