Dictionary
To spillover
noun
That which overflows; the excess or side effect.
Exact(8)
Military intervention in one country will lead to spillover into the next.
– our tear ducts are anatomically shallower, leading to spillover, which makes our crying more visible.
There are at least two ways in which it can do this.The first relates to spillover effects.
"We've seen domestic mergers and acquisitions activity rise, and that generally leads to spillover in cross-border deals," Ms. McCaughrin said.
"Two Broke Girls" on CBS pulled in almost 20 million viewers, thanks largely to spillover from "Two and a Half Men".
That's changing now, largely owing to spillover rejuvenation from neighboring Puerto Madero and San Telmo, two areas that have benefited from a rise in tourism and a real estate boom.
The bombing, the deadliest in Lebanon in decades, killed 27 people, ravaged a neighborhood south of Beirut and served as a new and powerful reminder of how vulnerable the country is to spillover from the civil war in neighboring Syria.
The El Paso Times quoted Barney Field, the executive director of El Paso for Jesus, as suggesting that the ordinance was making the city vulnerable to spillover violence from the drug war in neighboring Ciudad Juárez.
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