Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for bottleneck.
Definitions

bottleneck

[bot-l-nek] / ˈbɒt lˌnɛk /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Discussing the bull and bear case for “always-on” AI agents, they say the bottom line is that memory will be essential and expensive and to expect bottlenecks.

From MarketWatch

The two railroads, which control tracks on opposite sides of the Mississippi River, contend that by joining forces they could reduce bottlenecks at the Midwest interchanges and get coast-to-coast deliveries to retailers and factories faster.

From The Wall Street Journal

“With AI driving up demand for compute, Earth-based data centers appear to be encountering certain structural bottlenecks, mainly energy, cooling, and latency,” added Yu.

From Barron's

“In particular, no broad-based supply-chain bottlenecks have emerged, shelter inflation has declined steadily, and measures of wage growth point to a continued gradual slowing,” Williams said.

From MarketWatch

“In particular, no broad-based supply-chain bottlenecks have emerged, shelter inflation has declined steadily, and measures of wage growth point to a continued gradual slowing,” Williams said.

From MarketWatch