Collapse
collapse (noun, verb) - 1. a sudden fall, 2. a sudden complete failurea sudden collapse
collapsed suddenly from sheer strain
in danger of collapsing
close to collapsing
on the verge of collapsing
on the point of collapse
a complete collapse
the collapse and demise of the whole system
wholesale collapse
economic collapse
financial collapse
war led to the collapse of agriculture
the house collapsed from the weight of the snow on the roof
the cliff collapsed into the sea
buildings had a very high risk of collapse in an earthquake
after the collapse of their religion, the gods turned into demons
a collapse of a firm
prevent a collapse
save from imminent collapse
taxpayers would be compensated before other shareholders in the event of a collapse
the collapse of Australia's rice production due to drought
the largest bank collapse in U.S. history
the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the rushed sale of Merrill Lynch to Bank of America
the collapse of Lehman and sale of Merrill Lynch will only make matters worse
the overpowering use of monetary policies and lending to avert an economic collapse
lessen the chances of a financial collapse
a collapse in world oil prices
economic collapse, and revolutionary change in political and economic institutions
Faced with chaos in factories and a banking system close to collapse, the revolutionary government nationalized much of the economy
the collapse of the Roman Empire
concerns about possible state collapse
the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991
Since the collapse of communism, 25 new nation-states have been created
the collapse of North Korea or the possible reunification of the two Koreas
you risk collapse
a state of mental and physical collapse
collapse from exhaustion
collapse suddenly from a heart attack
a mental collapse
which building types are at the greatest risk of collapse and damage in a major earthquake
environmental collapse
The collapse of some fisheries
species collapse
the researchers chose to collapse these two factors into one factor






