0 to cause a business to close, so that its assets can be sold to pay its debts
1 to kill someone
2 to sell your investments or property to make them available in the form of money:
3 if a business liquidates or is liquidated, it is closed so that its assets can be sold to pay its debts:
4 to sell something in order to get cash:
She liquidated the stock and pulled about $10,000 from savings to pay off her debt.
In the event of a reclamation, the Fund may liquidate sufficient shares from a shareholder's account to reimburse the government or the private source.
A significant number of bankrupt firms did not enter the rehabilitation process but were simply liquidated.
First, relocated agents must be given currency or liquidated investment.
In this case the solution to is not unique, because the bank is indifferent between liquidating investment and borrowing from the discount window.
Investors were liquidating their portfolios and buying bonds.
Enforces contract provisions intended to protectthe agency, such as warranties or liquidated damages clauses.
A treaty negotiated in 1794 liquidated this policy, initiating a decade of fairly smooth relations.
As uncertainty mounted about the stability of key currencies, central banks liquidated their foreign-exchange balances and scrambled to replace them with gold reserves.
Central banks joined the fray, liquidating their foreign securities to avoid capital losses in the event of a foreign devaluation.