0 present participle of leverage --
1 to use something that you already have in order to achieve something new or better: --
2 to use borrowed money to buy an investment or company: --
Of these, 31 are in progress, and three investments have been made totalling £1.7 million (leveraging in a further £16 million).
With the exception of technical assistance, which is still funded through upfront funding, this means that you will have major leveraging.
Automatic verb classification is a means for leveraging expensive hand-coding of such information, but appropriate features must be devised and must be demonstrated to be useful.
If factors such as racism are preventing wealthy otavalenos from leveraging their economic power into political power, we need to hear more about how that works.
It exploits the economies of scale and scope, but is a more advanced form of leveraging resources.
Multiple application of knowledge or technology involves leveraging resources by identifying further deployment for an application of already existing products.
Leveraging the learning power of examples in automated constraint acquisition.
Desertification was (and still is in some quarters) more about leveraging money and securing reputations, than it ever was about a biophysical or social process.