释义 |
Definition of greenback in English: greenbacknoun ˈɡriːnbakˈɡrinˌbæk US informal A dollar bill; a dollar. 〈美,非正式〉一元美钞;一美元 he's worth a boatload of greenbacks Example sentencesExamples - On the other hand, foreigners, stuck with unconvertible greenbacks since 1971, have had no choice but to adopt dollars, rather than gold, as the world's reserve asset.
- ‘The sharp drop in the stock market further shook investors' confidence and brought some retail buying of greenbacks,’ a dealer at a foreign bank said.
- Stars who were paid fifty grand in greenbacks at Carnegie Hall settled for thirty percent of that on the South Bank.
- On the other hand, the appreciation of the NT dollar against the greenback will be beneficial in regulating the prices of imported goods and relieving potential inflation.
- As the currency started to slip in May, companies with future-debt obligations denominated in dollars rushed to buy greenbacks.
- Every month, the Fed prints new greenbacks and distributes them to a select group of housing developers, giving the new money in proportion to how many houses a particular builder constructs in a given period.
- But another persistent economic trend is gumming up the works: foreign producers aren't raising dollar prices, despite the greenback's sharp decline over the past year.
- After all, as long as China and Japan pursue export-led growth by refusing to let the dollar fall against their own currencies, the greenback will avoid a huge decline.
- The greenback has fallen roughly 40 percent since its high point against the euro in October 2000.
- Once outlawed as the currency of imperialism, greenbacks suddenly became not just accepted but necessary.
- ‘We have obligations to our shareholders,’ says Helicar - as if a pile of greenbacks is worth more than someone's father, mother, sister, brother or child.
- Estimated price is somewhere between 200-250 thousand greenbacks.
- The local unit has gained about 5 percent against the greenback this year.
- What's more, risk-averse investors in the U.S. Treasury market are more prone to hedge their exposure to the dollar by selling greenbacks.
- The Australian dollar rose against the greenback for the 13th straight week.
- He further threw his support behind China's insistence in pegging the yuan close to 8.28 to the greenback.
- And a whopping 66 percent of overseas fund managers thought the greenback was still too dear, despite its recent decline.
- A foreign exchange dealer said that the central bank was responsible for a large part of yesterday's drop, as it sold NT dollars heavily to buy greenbacks toward the session's close.
- In a ‘dollarized’ economy - the US greenback and the Argentine peso have parity and are interchangeable - many of the city prices are surprisingly high.
- It was successful initially and the economy grew quickly, as investors deemed dealing in greenbacks a safer bet.
Synonyms cash, hard cash, ready money Definition of greenback in US English: greenbacknounˈɡrēnˌbakˈɡrinˌbæk US informal 1A dollar bill; a dollar. 〈美,非正式〉一元美钞;一美元 the beer she purchased with our last greenback 花了我们最后一美元买到的。 Example sentencesExamples - On the other hand, the appreciation of the NT dollar against the greenback will be beneficial in regulating the prices of imported goods and relieving potential inflation.
- What's more, risk-averse investors in the U.S. Treasury market are more prone to hedge their exposure to the dollar by selling greenbacks.
- It was successful initially and the economy grew quickly, as investors deemed dealing in greenbacks a safer bet.
- A foreign exchange dealer said that the central bank was responsible for a large part of yesterday's drop, as it sold NT dollars heavily to buy greenbacks toward the session's close.
- In a ‘dollarized’ economy - the US greenback and the Argentine peso have parity and are interchangeable - many of the city prices are surprisingly high.
- The Australian dollar rose against the greenback for the 13th straight week.
- On the other hand, foreigners, stuck with unconvertible greenbacks since 1971, have had no choice but to adopt dollars, rather than gold, as the world's reserve asset.
- But another persistent economic trend is gumming up the works: foreign producers aren't raising dollar prices, despite the greenback's sharp decline over the past year.
- Estimated price is somewhere between 200-250 thousand greenbacks.
- After all, as long as China and Japan pursue export-led growth by refusing to let the dollar fall against their own currencies, the greenback will avoid a huge decline.
- ‘We have obligations to our shareholders,’ says Helicar - as if a pile of greenbacks is worth more than someone's father, mother, sister, brother or child.
- Once outlawed as the currency of imperialism, greenbacks suddenly became not just accepted but necessary.
- Every month, the Fed prints new greenbacks and distributes them to a select group of housing developers, giving the new money in proportion to how many houses a particular builder constructs in a given period.
- As the currency started to slip in May, companies with future-debt obligations denominated in dollars rushed to buy greenbacks.
- ‘The sharp drop in the stock market further shook investors' confidence and brought some retail buying of greenbacks,’ a dealer at a foreign bank said.
- And a whopping 66 percent of overseas fund managers thought the greenback was still too dear, despite its recent decline.
- The greenback has fallen roughly 40 percent since its high point against the euro in October 2000.
- Stars who were paid fifty grand in greenbacks at Carnegie Hall settled for thirty percent of that on the South Bank.
- He further threw his support behind China's insistence in pegging the yuan close to 8.28 to the greenback.
- The local unit has gained about 5 percent against the greenback this year.
2An animal with a green back, especially a race of the cutthroat trout found only in Colorado. 〈非正式〉背部呈绿色的动物(尤指一种只产于美国科罗拉多州的割喉鳟) Example sentencesExamples - Already, 23 self-sustaining populations of greenback cutthroat trout have been recovered and the species has been reclassified to the less critical category of threatened.
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