When a fledgling startup begins, it moves forward through dreams, innovations, and feasibility studies. However, many startups become victims of attrition within a few years of starting and begin to dwindle.
The main reasons for a startup's failure include lack of liquidity, bureaucracy, and not conducting proper scrutiny of the business. Many entrepreneurs create the fallacy that success will come just by having a good idea. But due to exorbitant costs, market volatility, and ambiguity in planning, they fall behind.
However, some startups survive and become large conglomerates. They use bootstrapping, remove business detriments, and are able to monopolize through innovation. However, if any startup does not take proper planning, it will get stuck in stagnation and will not be able to achieve perpetuity.
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Emoji
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Word | Images | Meaning | Example Sentence | Synonyms | Antonyms |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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#4064
🐣
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ˈflɛdʒ.lɪŋ
noun/adjective
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New, inexperienced, newly established.
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The fledgling startup needs investment. |
newbie, emerging, novice
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experienced, mature, established
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#4065
🚀
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ˈstɑːtʌp
noun
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New company, business venture.
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The startup grew into a global brand. |
venture, enterprise, initiative
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shutdown, closure, termination
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#4066
✅
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ˌfiː.zəˈbɪl.ə.ti
noun
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Possibility, practicality, viability.
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The feasibility study proved the project viable. |
practicality, viability, workability
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impossibility, infeasibility, unlikelihood
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#4067
📉
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əˈtrɪʃ.ən
noun
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Gradual decline, loss, wear.
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The company faced high employee attrition. |
erosion, decline, wear
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growth, expansion, strengthening
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#4068
⬇️
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ˈdwɪn.dl
verb
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Decrease, shrink, diminish.
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Resources started to dwindle due to overuse. |
decrease, shrink, diminish
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increase, expand, grow
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#4069
💰
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lɪˈkwɪd.ə.ti
noun
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Cash flow, financial fluidity.
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The company maintains high liquidity. |
cash flow, solvency, convertibility
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insolvency, bankruptcy, illiquidity
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#4070
📋
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bjʊəˈrɒk.rə.si
noun
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Administrative system, red tape, official procedures.
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Excessive bureaucracy delays projects. |
red tape, officialdom, regulation
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flexibility, efficiency, deregulation
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#4071
🔍
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ˈskruː.tɪ.ni
noun
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Careful examination, inspection, analysis.
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The documents are under strict scrutiny. |
inspection, examination, analysis
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neglect, superficiality, oversight
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#4072
❌
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ˈfæl.ə.si
noun
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False belief, misconception, false reasoning.
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The idea that success comes easy is a fallacy. |
misconception, falsehood, deception
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truth, reality, accuracy
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#4073
💸
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ɪɡˈzɔː.bɪ.tənt
adjective
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Excessive, unreasonably high, outrageous.
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The hotel charges exorbitant prices. |
excessive, outrageous, unreasonable
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moderate, reasonable, affordable
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#4074
📊
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ˌvɒl.əˈtɪl.ə.ti
noun
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Instability, fluctuation, unpredictability.
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Market volatility can lead to financial losses. |
instability, fluctuation, unpredictability
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stability, consistency, predictability
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#4075
❓
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ˌæm.bɪˈɡjuː.ə.ti
noun
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Uncertainty, vagueness, unclear meaning.
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The law's ambiguity caused confusion. |
vagueness, uncertainty, equivocation
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clarity, precision, certainty
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#4076
🏢
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kənˈɡlɒm.ər.ət
noun
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Large business corporation, combined group.
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The multinational conglomerate owns several brands. |
corporation, consortium, enterprise
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fragmentation, division, separation
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#4077
💪
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ˈbuːt.stræp.ɪŋ
noun
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Self-funding business, self-reliant effort.
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The startup used bootstrapping to grow. |
self-funding, entrepreneurship, self-reliance
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investment, sponsorship, dependency
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#4078
⚠️
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ˈdɛtrɪ.mənt
noun
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Harm, damage, impairment.
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Smoking is a detriment to health. |
harm, damage, impairment
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benefit, advantage, gain
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#4079
👑
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məˈnɒp.ə.laɪz
verb
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Control exclusively, dominate market.
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The company tried to monopolize the market. |
dominate, control, corner
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share, distribute, liberate
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#4080
🛑
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stæɡˈneɪ.ʃən
noun
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Lack of progress, decline, inactivity.
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Economic stagnation leads to job losses. |
decline, recession, inactivity
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growth, progress, expansion
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#4081
♾️
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ˌpɜː.pɪˈtʃuː.ɪ.ti
noun
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Permanence, eternity, continuity.
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The contract ensures payments in perpetuity. |
eternity, continuity, permanence
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temporariness, transience, instability
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