soft landing
See also: soft-landing
English
Noun
soft landing (countable and uncountable, plural soft landings)
- (countable, aeronautics) A landing that does not result in the destruction of the payload or the vehicle.
- (countable, economics) A business cycle downturn which avoids recession.
- 2023 November 4, Harriet Clarfelt, Jennifer Hughes, “Hopes build for US ‘soft landing’”, in FT Weekend, page 1:
- Hopes that the US economy is heading for a “soft landing” were boosted yesterday by the latest job figures, fuelling a rally in stocks and bonds.
- 2024 January 30, Larry Elliott, “IMF warns Jeremy Hunt against tax cuts in budget”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:
- The IMF said the global economy was gliding towards a “soft landing” after coping with the impact of tough central bank interest-rate action to reduce inflation.
- (uncountable, chemistry) A form of mass spectrometry characterized by deposition of intact species on surfaces at low kinetic energies which precludes the fragmentation of the incident species.
- Coordinate term: hard landing
Translations
landing that does not result in the destruction of the payload and/or the vehicle
Etymology 2
From the beatmania IIDX 2nd style song "SOFT LANDING ON THE BODY".
Noun
soft landing (plural soft landings)
- (rhythm games, slang) Sudden or extreme changes in speed.
- (The addition of quotations indicative of this usage is being sought:)
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