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industrial output

n. (context accounting English) What an industry produces, as a national total.

Usage examples of "industrial output".

It was famous for its universities, its medical centers -- most Poulsen treatments were administered there for the Web citizens who could afford it -- its baroque architecture -- especially beautiful in its mountain fortress, Keep Enable -- and its industrial output.

Ukraine, the largest and most populous ex-Soviet republic besides Russia, had one of the smallest gross national products in industrialized Europe--every bit of its industrial output was needed to maintain its fragile existing infrastructure and maintain a modicum of a decent life for its citizens, with hardly anything left over for exports, long-term capital improvement, or warfighting.

Completely ignoring the question of training a capital ship's crew, no one can afford to expend that big a chunk of industrial output without a good reason.

If England's industrial output goes down, who'd step in to make up the shortfall?

Prior's Fen Atoll was now home to three hundred and fifty thousand people, with an industrial output ten times that of the land-bound portion of the city.

They really are only interested in pillaging our industrial output.

Each had prepared a draft, and each had of course called for the greatest possible share of manpower and industrial output.

This wonder was a regular stop on the tours Halyard conducted for a bizarre variety of foreign potentates, whose common denominator was that their people represented untapped markets for America's stupendous industrial output.

Their industrial output will increase with more factories and more workers who do not seek to sabotage production.

If we devoted our entire industrial output to shipbuilding, it would take decades to reach the number which the Primes can deploy against us right now.

Without rivalries, and acting in conjunction, the combined industrial output of every manufacturing plant was greater than before.

It was famous for its universities, its medical centers-most Poulsen treatments were administered there for the Web citizens who could afford it-its baroque architecture-especially beautiful in its mountain fortress, Keep Enable-and its industrial output.

From early 1989 through mid-1992, according to IMF and World Bank statistics, industrial output fell by 45 percent and prices rose 40-fold in Poland and real wages were almost halved.