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break-even
[breyk-ee-vuhn]
adjective
having income exactly equal to expenditure, thus showing neither profit nor loss.
noun
Energy.the stage at which a fission or fusion reaction becomes self-sustaining.
break even
verb
(intr, adverb) to attain a level of activity, as in commerce, or a point of operation, as in gambling, at which there is neither profit nor loss
noun
accounting
the level of commercial activity at which the total cost and total revenue of a business enterprise are equal
( as modifier )
breakeven prices
Word History and Origins
Origin of break-even1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
And current oil prices sitting below the government’s break-even price of around $100 a barrel means that it will be running a deficit, said David Butter, a Middle East energy expert at Chatham House, a think tank in London.
"We are almost break-even in Armenia and that gives us strength to start expanding to other markets, like Uzbekistan."
That single move could save Royal Mail £300m a year – putting it back on a break-even footing.
With tickets priced from £10, a 50,000-strong crowd was the break-even point.
As profits have risen, so have prices, and Big Game's break-even point has dropped.
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