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- Wimbledon_Effect abstract "The Wimbledon effect (Japanese: ウィンブルドン現象, rōmaji: Uinburudon Genshō, literally "Wimbledon Phenomenon") is a chiefly British and Japanese analogy (which possibly originated in Japan) which compares the tennis fame of the Wimbledon Championships, held at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, London, with the economic success of the United Kingdom's financial services industries – especially those clustered in the City of London. The point of the analogy is that a national and international institution (the All England Club) can be highly successful despite the lack of strong native competition, as in modern tennis Britain has produced very few Wimbledon champions, with only Ann Haydon Jones, Virginia Wade (both women's singles), Jonathan Marray (men's doubles), Andy Murray (men's singles), Jeremy Bates, Jo Durie and Jamie Murray (mixed doubles) winning titles in the Open Era.".
- Wimbledon_Effect thumbnail Bjorkman_and_Woodbridge_winners_Wimbledon_2004.jpg?width=300.
- Wimbledon_Effect wikiPageExternalLink foreign_penetration_of_japans_investmentbanking_market_will_japan_experience_the_wimbledon_effect.
- Wimbledon_Effect wikiPageExternalLink 1468750.
- Wimbledon_Effect wikiPageExternalLink 0,11268,1606237,00.html.
- Wimbledon_Effect wikiPageExternalLink BC_RS_compposition_FR.pdf.
- Wimbledon_Effect wikiPageExternalLink 4aedeb7e-5536-11da-8a74-00000e25118c,dwp_uuid=732e6488-5a86-11da-a94a-0000779e2340.html.
- Wimbledon_Effect wikiPageExternalLink newsweek.
- Wimbledon_Effect wikiPageID "8092892".
- Wimbledon_Effect wikiPageRevisionID "582852916".
- Wimbledon_Effect hasPhotoCollection Wimbledon_Effect.
- Wimbledon_Effect subject Category:Economic_theories.
- Wimbledon_Effect subject Category:Economy_of_Japan.
- Wimbledon_Effect subject Category:Economy_of_London.
- Wimbledon_Effect subject Category:Financial_services_in_the_United_Kingdom.
- Wimbledon_Effect subject Category:Metaphors_referring_to_sport.
- Wimbledon_Effect subject Category:Sport_in_Japan.
- Wimbledon_Effect subject Category:The_Championships,_Wimbledon.
- Wimbledon_Effect type Abstraction100002137.
- Wimbledon_Effect type Cognition100023271.
- Wimbledon_Effect type Communication100033020.
- Wimbledon_Effect type Device107068844.
- Wimbledon_Effect type EconomicTheories.
- Wimbledon_Effect type EconomicTheory105994935.
- Wimbledon_Effect type Explanation105793000.
- Wimbledon_Effect type ExpressiveStyle107066659.
- Wimbledon_Effect type HigherCognitiveProcess105770664.
- Wimbledon_Effect type Metaphor107106800.
- Wimbledon_Effect type MetaphorsReferringToSport.
- Wimbledon_Effect type Process105701363.
- Wimbledon_Effect type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Wimbledon_Effect type RhetoricalDevice107098193.
- Wimbledon_Effect type Theory105989479.
- Wimbledon_Effect type Thinking105770926.
- Wimbledon_Effect type Trope107105475.
- Wimbledon_Effect comment "The Wimbledon effect (Japanese: ウィンブルドン現象, rōmaji: Uinburudon Genshō, literally "Wimbledon Phenomenon") is a chiefly British and Japanese analogy (which possibly originated in Japan) which compares the tennis fame of the Wimbledon Championships, held at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, London, with the economic success of the United Kingdom's financial services industries – especially those clustered in the City of London.".
- Wimbledon_Effect label "Wimbledon Effect".
- Wimbledon_Effect label "ウィンブルドン現象".
- Wimbledon_Effect label "温布尔登现象".
- Wimbledon_Effect sameAs ウィンブルドン現象.
- Wimbledon_Effect sameAs 윔블던_효과.
- Wimbledon_Effect sameAs m.026r5df.
- Wimbledon_Effect sameAs Q837799.
- Wimbledon_Effect sameAs Q837799.
- Wimbledon_Effect sameAs Wimbledon_Effect.
- Wimbledon_Effect wasDerivedFrom Wimbledon_Effect?oldid=582852916.
- Wimbledon_Effect depiction Bjorkman_and_Woodbridge_winners_Wimbledon_2004.jpg.
- Wimbledon_Effect isPrimaryTopicOf Wimbledon_Effect.