0 past simple and past participle of liquidate
1 to cause a business to close, so that its assets can be sold to pay its debts
2 to kill someone
Some had changed hands and/or been liquidated.
First, relocated agents must be given currency or liquidated investment.
A significant number of bankrupt firms did not enter the rehabilitation process but were simply liquidated.
First, they were to verify and acquire the property and money of liquidated literary organisations.
This includes the cost of unscheduled resources and liquidated damages.
As uncertainty mounted about the stability of key currencies, central banks liquidated their foreign-exchange balances and scrambled to replace them with gold reserves.
Precautionary savings include the use of food stock, livestock, and financial assets (no households liquidated productive capital such as land and fishing nets).
Most rents were stipulated in kind, although they were frequently liquidated in cash.