Meaning and Usage
"抵消" (dǐxiāo) means to offset or cancel out one effect with another, often used in financial, physical, or abstract contexts where two opposing forces or values balance each other.
Common Contexts
It frequently appears in discussions about finances (e.g., profits and losses), physics (forces), or policy impacts where one factor neutralizes another.
Collocations and Patterns
- 抵消亏损: offset losses, used in financial contexts
- 相互抵消: mutually offset, used when two forces or effects cancel each other
- 抵消影响: offset impact, often in policy or social contexts
Usage Notes
"抵消" implies a balancing or neutralizing effect rather than simple reduction. It differs from "减少" (reduce) because it stresses the idea of two opposing quantities or effects negating each other. Avoid confusing it with "消除" (eliminate), which means to remove completely.
Register and Tone
This term is formal and commonly used in written and spoken Chinese in professional, academic, and media contexts.
Meaning and Usage
"抵消" (dǐxiāo) means to offset or cancel out one effect with another, often used in financial, physical, or abstract contexts where two opposing forces or values balance each other.
Common Contexts
It frequently appears in discussions about finances (e.g., profits and losses), physics (forces), or policy impacts where one factor neutralizes another.
Collocations and Patterns
- 抵消亏损: offset losses, used in financial contexts
- 相互抵消: mutually offset, used when two forces or effects cancel each other
- 抵消影响: offset impact, often in policy or social contexts
Usage Notes
"抵消" implies a balancing or neutralizing effect rather than simple reduction. It differs from "减少" (reduce) because it stresses the idea of two opposing quantities or effects negating each other. Avoid confusing it with "消除" (eliminate), which means to remove completely.
Register and Tone
This term is formal and commonly used in written and spoken Chinese in professional, academic, and media contexts.
Meaning and Usage
"抵消" (dǐxiāo) means to offset or cancel out one effect with another, often used in financial, physical, or abstract contexts where two opposing forces or values balance each other.
Common Contexts
It frequently appears in discussions about finances (e.g., profits and losses), physics (forces), or policy impacts where one factor neutralizes another.
Collocations and Patterns
- 抵消亏损: offset losses, used in financial contexts
- 相互抵消: mutually offset, used when two forces or effects cancel each other
- 抵消影响: offset impact, often in policy or social contexts
Usage Notes
"抵消" implies a balancing or neutralizing effect rather than simple reduction. It differs from "减少" (reduce) because it stresses the idea of two opposing quantities or effects negating each other. Avoid confusing it with "消除" (eliminate), which means to remove completely.
Register and Tone
This term is formal and commonly used in written and spoken Chinese in professional, academic, and media contexts.