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year-over-year

or year o·ver year

[ yeer-oh-ver-yeer ]

adverb

, Accounting, Finance.
  1. as compared with the corresponding figure 12 months earlier; involving or reckoned by such a comparison: : YoY

    Exports fell 2 percent year over year in May.

    February rents for one-bedroom apartments saw a year-over-year increase of 6 percent.

  2. in each year that passes after an initial investment, the start of an observed trend, etc.; annual or annually:

    The gain from this software purchase has been our best ROI year over year.

    Over the last decade, the year-over-year trend in inflation has strongly correlated with the year-over-year trend in GDP.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of year-over-year1

First recorded in 1790–1800, for an earlier sense
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Example Sentences

In Silicon Valley proper, that number increases to $108,603, marking a 7.2 percent year-over-year increase.

I mean actual year-over-year decreases in spending per capita.

Like Medicare, Medicaid has for a long time posted year-over-year spending increases.

Tim Hortons, while it has far less cultural cachet, saw a year-over-year increase in profit of 14 percent in the second quarter.

And for the first time since 2003, it reported that quarterly year-over-year income fell.

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year of graceyear-round