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  1. Dictionary
    escalating
    /ˈɛskəleɪtɪŋ/

    adjective

    • 1. increasing rapidly: "the escalating cost of healthcare"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. ESCALATE definition: 1. to become or make something become greater or more serious: 2. to involve someone more…. Learn more.

  3. To escalate is intensify or increase quickly. When you see this word, picture an escalator that takes you up to the next floor quickly. But remember, there's something you don't like on that higher level because it's usually bad if something escalates.

  4. adjective [ before noun ] uk / ˈeskəleɪtɪŋ / us. Add to word list. increasing in price, amount, rate, etc.: escalating costs / prices / rates. (Definition of escalating from the Cambridge Business English Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Examples of escalating. escalating.

  5. verb (used with or without object) , es·ca·lat·ed, es·ca·lat·ing. to increase in intensity, magnitude, etc.: to escalate a war; a time when prices escalate. Synonyms: swell, mount, advance. Antonyms: fall, decrease, lower. to raise, lower, rise, or descend on or as if on an escalator. escalate.

  6. The meaning of ESCALATE is to increase in extent, volume, number, amount, intensity, or scope. How to use escalate in a sentence. to increase in extent, volume, number, amount, intensity, or scope; expand…

  7. (ˈɛskəˌleɪtɪŋ ) adjective. increasing in extent, intensity, or magnitude. It tells a story of escalating racial tensions. The change in plans was due to escalating building costs. He called for restraint in the escalating conflict. The country has been caught in an escalating crisis. Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers.

  8. Definition of escalate verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. 1. transitive verb/intransitive verb. If a bad situation escalates or if someone or something escalates it, it becomes greater in size, seriousness, or intensity. [journalism] Both unions and management fear the dispute could escalate. The protests escalated into five days of rioting.

  10. to become or make something greater, worse, more serious, etc. escalate (into something) The fighting escalated into a full-scale war. the escalating costs of health care escalate something (into something) We do not want to escalate the war.

  11. 1. To increase, enlarge, or intensify: escalated the hostilities in the Persian Gulf. 2. To pass (a transaction or case) on to a higher level in an organizational hierarchy: escalated the customer's complaint. [Back-formation from escalator .] es′ca·la′tion n. es′ca·la·to′ry (-lə-tôr′ē) adj.