escalation

listen to the pronunciation of escalation
English - Turkish
{i} gerginlik
{i} pahalanma
{i} yükselme
(Askeri) Gerginlik atışı, tırmanma
(Askeri) GERGİNLİK ARTIŞI, TIRMANMA: Bir anlaşmazlığın kapsam veya şiddetinde kasıtlı veya kasıtsız artış
artma
yükseltme
artırma
eskalasyon
artış
kızışma
(Askeri) gerginlik artışı
(Hukuk) yükseklik
(Hukuk) tırmanma
escalation policy
(Politika, Siyaset) tırmanma politikası
escalation price
fiyat yükselmesi
escalation of commitment
Kişinin başarısızlığı ortadan kaldırma psikolojisiyle her seferinde daha da kötüye gitme ihtimalini göze alma hali
escalation, gradation
eskalasyon, derece
escalation clause
(Ticaret) artış hükmü
escalation clause
(Politika, Siyaset) çekilme şartı
escalation clause
ücret ayarlama şartı
escalation of war
(Askeri) harbin tırmanması
escalation of war
(Askeri) harbin kızışması
escalation of war
(Askeri) Harbin kızışması, tırmanması
escalate
yükseltmek
escalate
{f} (savaş, anlaşmazlık v.b.'ni) kızıştırmak; kızışmak
escalate
artmak
escalate
tırmanmak
escalate
fiyatı yükseltmek
escalate
savaşı kışkırtmak
escalate
yükseltmek (fiyat vb'ni)
escalate
yükseliş
escalate
çoğalmak
escalate
tırmandırmak
escalate
kızışma
escalate
(savaşı) kışkırtmak
escalate
(fiyat/vergin) yükselmek
escalate
tırmandır
de escalation
eskalasyon de
de-escalation
de-eskalasyon
increase, intensification
artış, yoğunlaştırma
escalate
{f} yükselmek
escalate
{f} (fiyat v.b.'ni) yükseltmek; yükselmek
escalate
art,tırmandır
escalate
{f} artırmak
escalate
{f} çıkmak
escalate
{f} kızıştırmak
ladder of escalation
(Çevre) yükselme merdiveni
English - English
a deliberate or premeditated increase in the violence or geographic scope of a conflict
an increase or rise, especially one to counteract a perceived discrepancy
A clause, usually in long-term supply contracts, which provides for periodic price adjustment based on variations in any or all cost factors "Escalating prices" are the opposite of "firm" prices, which are not subject to change over the life of a contract
The act of advancing an issue to the next appropriate level for resolution
an increase to counteract a perceived discrepancy; "higher wages caused an escalation of prices"; "there was a gradual escalation of hostilities"
Demanding the total repayment of a debt When a homeowner does not make payments on time, there comes a point when the lender can demand the loan be paid off in full
Process of forwarding a User’s support call to an expert Support Representative or one of the application’s developers
Increasing the level of fighting
{i} increase, intensification
an increase to counteract a perceived discrepancy; "higher wages caused an escalation of prices"; "there was a gradual escalation of hostilities
Escalation is an increase in the intensity of a conflict When a conflict escalates, the people involved (disputants) move from gently opposing positions to more forceful, confrontational tactics The number of parties involved may increase, and the number of issues under discussion may grow Also, when a dispute escalates, the parties may want more than just to win-they may also want to hurt their opponent Conflict can escalate quickly but may take much longer to calm down, or de-escalate
The process of increasing the stated urgency or priority of an incident so that it gets more attention
The right reserved by the lender to increase the amount of the payments and/or interest upon the happening of a certain event
Escalation is an increase in intensity of a conflict According to Dean Pruitt and Jeffery Rubin (1986, 7-8), as a conflict escalates, the disputants change from relatively gentle opposition to heavier, more confrontational tactics The number of parties tends to increase, as do the number of issues, and the breadth of the issues (that is, issues change from ones which are very specific to more global concerns) Lastly disputants change from not only wanting to win themselves, but also wanting to hurt the opponent While conflicts escalate quickly and easily, de-escalation, a diminishing of intensity, is often much harder to achieve
Passing information and/or requesting action on an Incident, Problem or Change to more senior staff (hierarchical escalation) or other specialists (functional escalation) The circumstances in which either vertical escalation for information/authority to apply further resources or horizontal escalation for greater functional involvement need to be precisely described, so that the purpose of the escalation and the nature of the required response is absolutely clear to all parties as the escalation occurs Escalation rules will be geared to priority targets Functional Escalation is sometimes called Referral
Refers to the increase in benefit (usually annual) payable during the payment term of an insurance claim that is not settled via a lump sum payment For example, claims under an Income Protection Policy might escalate annually in line with the Retail Price Index
(synonym/can be used interchangeably with Provocation): Any act of violence or resistance by the Palestinians
escalation plan
A plan that specifies actions be taken when the telephone queue begins to build beyond acceptable levels
escalation of commitment
Escalation of commitment was first described by Barry M. Staw in his 1976 paper, "Knee deep in the big muddy: A study of escalating commitment to a chosen course of action".. More recently the term sunk cost fallacy has been used to describe the phenomenon where people justify increased investment in a decision, based on the cumulative prior investment, despite new evidence suggesting that the decision was probably wrong. Such investment may include money, time, or — in the case of military strategy — human lives. The phenomenon and the sentiment underlying it are reflected in such proverbial images as Throwing good money after bad and In for a dime, in for a dollar (or In for a penny, in for a pound)
escalation of commitment
Escalation of commitment refers to the psychological condition whereby people continue to support or believe in something that is repetitively failing
escalation of violence
intensification of fighting or hostilities, increase in use of force
de-escalation
reduction in size or intensity of conflict
escalate
to increase (something) in extent or intensity; to intensify or step up

The shooting escalated the existing hostility.

escalate
in technical support, to transfer a telephone caller to the next higher level of authority

The tech 1 escalated the caller to a tech 2.

re-escalation
An instance of escalating again

After March 1968 American policy on Vietnam was all a retrograde operation, to use the military euphemism for retreat, punctuated only by Nixon’s temporary reescalations in 1970 and 1972.

re-escalation
The process of escalating again

Unlike crisis escalation, crisis termination is a two-directional process in which protagonists cautiously descend the escalation ladder while simultaneously guarding against possible undetected re-escalation by one’s opponent.

de-escalation
(war) a reduction in intensity (of a crisis or a war)
escalate
to keep increasing
escalate
If a bad situation escalates or if someone or something escalates it, it becomes greater in size, seriousness, or intensity. Both unions and management fear the dispute could escalate The protests escalated into five days of rioting Defeat could cause one side or other to escalate the conflict. + escalation escalations es·ca·la·tion The threat of nuclear escalation remains. a sudden escalation of violence
escalate
increase in extent or intensity; "The Allies escalated the bombing
escalate
To intensify To wage a wider war
escalate
To "Escalate" is to bring an issue to the attention of a Supervisor, Manager, or General Manager
escalate
increase in extent or intensity; "The Allies escalated the bombing"
escalate
The process of handing a call to a supervisor when the enquiry is outside the agent's delegation, when the enquiry/situation is too complex for the agent to deal with or when the customer asks to speak with someone more senior (See refer and transfer )
escalate
{f} make worse, aggravate; raise, increase
escalations
plural of escalation
escalation
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