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词汇 monetize
释义

Definition of monetize in English:

monetize

(British monetise)
verb ˈmʌnɪtʌɪzˈmɑnəˌtaɪz
[with object]
  • 1Convert into or express in the form of currency.

    把…转换成货币;使货币化

    Hamilton had monetized the entire federal and state war debts
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Is this a sign that the fiscal deficit is finally being monetised?
    • He notes that the company will monetize sales by selling images to users and splitting the revenue with the illustrators who created them.
    • The trick is to monetize this buzz, to make liberal use of her celebrity pixie dust to undo the damage her legal woes did to her company.
    • Such is the simplified view of how the Federal Reserve actions monetized recent price increases, such as those of oil.
    • It is not up to the governments to monetize or demonetize a commodity.
    • The system, at this point, demonstrates a strong proclivity to monetize rising prices - inflation begetting higher inflation.
    • To the extent that the Fed is able to monetize assets it can increase bank reserves, upon which banks can increase the money supply by pyramiding further.
    • The Bundesbank resisted monetizing the deficit and interest rates jumped to record levels as early as 1989.
    • We'll never have the scale of a portal, but we have a much better ability to monetize the traffic we have.
    • Will it be stabilised by fiscal transfers from other member countries or should the European Central Bank be allowed to monetise the accrued national debt?
    • The sale also afforded us the opportunity to monetize a currently nonproductive asset.
    • The debt load it heaps upon our already sated budgets will have to be monetized.
    • The Constitution denies power to the government to monetize its debt.
    • Six months after the launch, the board made the decision to dismiss the staff, close our virtual doors, and monetize the assets.
    • Dollar balances will continue to inundate the world, and foreign central banks will be forced to acquire / monetize these flows.
    • Hey, who knows about monetizing assets better than CEOs?
    • Obviously, monetizing any commodity cheapens it.
    • The Federal Reserve has not yet had to monetize the national deficit, but the trend seems to point in that direction.
    • Doing so allows them to avoid sending bearish signals to investors while still monetizing their shares.
    • ‘If you monetize it now, you get probably a pretty good multiple for the business… and you get some liquidity in the door today,’ he says.
    1. 1.1usually as adjective monetized Convert or adapt (a society, economy, etc.) to trade based on the exchange of money.
      a fully monetized society

      一个全面货币化的社会。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • In the third century the economy was becoming less monetized; this trend reversed itself after the establishment of the solidus.
      • His claim that ‘the fetishism of social relations becomes an established fact’ in a monetized society remains underelaborated.
      • He embraced them as practitioners of the money trade whose credit served to induce economic equalization and prosperity in the monetized society of fifteenth-century Urbino.
      • The earliest Greek poetry and wisdom, we citizens of a thoroughly monetized society recognise as alien and yet somehow more akin to us than anything from those earlier civilisations.
      • Customary forms of communal labor were gradually giving way to more monetized arrangements as agriculture became increasingly commercial and war disrupted the supply and demand for workers.
  • 2Earn revenue from (an asset, business, etc.)

    the company has not said how it expects to monetize the game
    some of this content can be monetized
    Example sentencesExamples
    • "There was a fair amount of resistance toward the strategy of monetizing our businesses," says Sartain.
    • If there's a resistance to adverts, how do you monetise these sites?
    • While most business owners spend a good chunk of their time touting the benefits of their products and services, "they haven't tried to monetize those benefits," says Brent.
    • We take that relationship between the producer and the audience and monetise it through advertising.
    • This is a very early take on VOD and a studio monetizing old materials.
    • The site, which averages 4.7 million users a month, plans to monetize those eyeballs by delivering them to advertisers.
    • If you think about our consumption of 465 million page views per day in December, that's a whole lot of inventory to monetize.
    • You can better monetise a person taking 20 cents off them for every item, than to ask someone for $10 up front.
    • Take away the exchange value of the copy, and how are artists able to monetise their creative work?
    • Overall, 80.5 percent of our newspapers try to monetise (part of) their online content in direct ways.

Derivatives

  • monetization

  • noun mʌnɪtʌɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n
    • The deputies had plenty of other means at their disposal to criticize the government and protest the monetization of benefits.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • If the only tool you use for measuring value is a price tag or monetization, then those values that are not easily monetized begin to look like they have no value.
      • The right degree of monetization will cause demand to be just right, restoring output to normal while prices remain reasonably stable.
      • In their discussions, monetization is not limited to paper assets, but curiously includes the mention of gold mines, among other things.
      • And the company is exploring options for continued monetization in ways that aim to help, rather than burden, its customers.

Origin

Late 19th century: from French monétiser, from Latin moneta 'money'.

Definition of monetize in US English:

monetize

(British monetise)
verbˈmɑnəˌtaɪzˈmänəˌtīz
[with object]
  • 1Convert into or express in the form of currency.

    把…转换成货币;使货币化

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The system, at this point, demonstrates a strong proclivity to monetize rising prices - inflation begetting higher inflation.
    • We'll never have the scale of a portal, but we have a much better ability to monetize the traffic we have.
    • Six months after the launch, the board made the decision to dismiss the staff, close our virtual doors, and monetize the assets.
    • It is not up to the governments to monetize or demonetize a commodity.
    • To the extent that the Fed is able to monetize assets it can increase bank reserves, upon which banks can increase the money supply by pyramiding further.
    • The Bundesbank resisted monetizing the deficit and interest rates jumped to record levels as early as 1989.
    • ‘If you monetize it now, you get probably a pretty good multiple for the business… and you get some liquidity in the door today,’ he says.
    • Such is the simplified view of how the Federal Reserve actions monetized recent price increases, such as those of oil.
    • The debt load it heaps upon our already sated budgets will have to be monetized.
    • Dollar balances will continue to inundate the world, and foreign central banks will be forced to acquire / monetize these flows.
    • He notes that the company will monetize sales by selling images to users and splitting the revenue with the illustrators who created them.
    • The Federal Reserve has not yet had to monetize the national deficit, but the trend seems to point in that direction.
    • Will it be stabilised by fiscal transfers from other member countries or should the European Central Bank be allowed to monetise the accrued national debt?
    • Obviously, monetizing any commodity cheapens it.
    • Is this a sign that the fiscal deficit is finally being monetised?
    • Hey, who knows about monetizing assets better than CEOs?
    • The sale also afforded us the opportunity to monetize a currently nonproductive asset.
    • The Constitution denies power to the government to monetize its debt.
    • Doing so allows them to avoid sending bearish signals to investors while still monetizing their shares.
    • The trick is to monetize this buzz, to make liberal use of her celebrity pixie dust to undo the damage her legal woes did to her company.
    1. 1.1usually as adjective monetized Adapt (a society) to the use of money.
      使(社会)货币化
      a fully monetized society

      一个全面货币化的社会。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • His claim that ‘the fetishism of social relations becomes an established fact’ in a monetized society remains underelaborated.
      • Customary forms of communal labor were gradually giving way to more monetized arrangements as agriculture became increasingly commercial and war disrupted the supply and demand for workers.
      • The earliest Greek poetry and wisdom, we citizens of a thoroughly monetized society recognise as alien and yet somehow more akin to us than anything from those earlier civilisations.
      • He embraced them as practitioners of the money trade whose credit served to induce economic equalization and prosperity in the monetized society of fifteenth-century Urbino.
      • In the third century the economy was becoming less monetized; this trend reversed itself after the establishment of the solidus.
  • 2Earn revenue from (an asset, business, etc.)

    the company has not said how it expects to monetize the game
    some of this content can be monetized
    Example sentencesExamples
    • If there's a resistance to adverts, how do you monetise these sites?
    • If you think about our consumption of 465 million page views per day in December, that's a whole lot of inventory to monetize.
    • Take away the exchange value of the copy, and how are artists able to monetise their creative work?
    • This is a very early take on VOD and a studio monetizing old materials.
    • Overall, 80.5 percent of our newspapers try to monetise (part of) their online content in direct ways.
    • The site, which averages 4.7 million users a month, plans to monetize those eyeballs by delivering them to advertisers.
    • While most business owners spend a good chunk of their time touting the benefits of their products and services, "they haven't tried to monetize those benefits," says Brent.
    • "There was a fair amount of resistance toward the strategy of monetizing our businesses," says Sartain.
    • You can better monetise a person taking 20 cents off them for every item, than to ask someone for $10 up front.
    • We take that relationship between the producer and the audience and monetise it through advertising.

Origin

Late 19th century: from French monétiser, from Latin moneta ‘money’.

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