释义 |
Definition of syndicate in English: syndicatenoun ˈsɪndɪkətˈsɪndɪkət 1A group of individuals or organizations combined to promote a common interest. 辛迪加,企业联合组织 large-scale buyouts involving a syndicate of financial institutions 金融机构组成的财团参与了的大规模收购活动。 犯罪集团。 Example sentencesExamples - But there are cheaper ways of ownership, such as joining a syndicate.
- The police say there are 238 criminal syndicates operating in the country and across its borders.
- The 270 members of the Chamber of Counselors are selected by local councils, professional organizations, and labor syndicates for nine-year terms.
- So far as the individual syndicate was concerned, the effect of the spiral was to magnify many times the impact of a particular loss.
- Tell me how can an illegal gambling syndicate operate and flourish with police as patrons?
- Most land is private property and owned by large business syndicates and individuals.
- The move came after three syndicates revealed a combined total burden of £135m for claims.
- It is a lucrative business for the syndicate involved.
- Accountability was also non-existent and officials became easy targets for organised crime syndicates.
- Individual private investors tend to buy either on their own, or in syndicates organised by intermediaries with up to 20 investors in any one deal.
- Servicing the debts will obviously involve a net transfer from the company to the syndicate of lenders, not the shareholders.
- Some of these syndicates provide a tax advantage, allowing individuals to invest through their pension contributions.
- In larger transactions, a syndicate of venture capital houses or private equity firms might combine to provide the equity finance.
- Most of the action is initiated by injuries, assorted rumors, and betting syndicates.
- We have not explored the way in which estimates were made by individual syndicates or individual auditors.
- The new venture will deliver commercial property investment opportunities in Ireland and abroad to Irish individual, syndicates, intermediaries and advisers.
- By contrast, the syndicates of private investors have become more ambitious.
- He said the suspect was a member of an international drug syndicate.
- The furthering of agricultural settlements financed by joint-stock companies, syndicates, and individuals symbolized the beginning of a conceptual triumph over the long-standing tradition of piracy.
- Bonds can be issued through individuals or syndicates.
Synonyms business, place of business, premises, firm, company, concern, enterprise, venture, organization, operation, undertaking, industry - 1.1 An association or agency supplying material simultaneously to a number of newspapers or periodicals.
报刊辛迪加 Example sentencesExamples - No newspaper or syndicate in their right mind should be letting this hateful attempt at humor grace their pages.
- In the meanwhile, newspapers are in trouble and are all too happy to pick up criticism from their affiliated syndicates.
- He promptly sent ‘The Boondocks’ off to make the rounds of the news syndicates, and Universal picked him up.
- Indeed, Stromberg cites Aaron McGruder's ‘The Boondocks’ as a major challenge to the old world order of cartoon syndicates.
- The mushrooming of political parties, syndicates, and newspapers signals a nascent political pluralism upon which democracy can be built.
- His syndicate declined to publish the second of the two columns.
- Ironically, online news sites become even more dependent on news agency wholesalers and features syndicates to fill the expanded news hole.
- At any rate, I was a bit worried all day that I was going to lose my hall pass, and kept asking my friends who have real jobs with newspapers and syndicates and such if they had an extra holder, to no avail.
- Are these stories generated locally or do they come from other sources such as syndicates, wire services or other newspapers?
- There's a common perception in the West that the only way to become a financially successful cartoonist is to get the newspaper syndicates to pick you up.
- The editor at your syndicate said that of the 6,500 submissions they get every year, they take only two or three.
- In the world of newspapers, a syndicate distributes information to subscribers, allowing each publication to tailor the content of information it receives.
- At any rate, its campaign against me included flash-floods of e-mail intended to shut down servers at my newspaper and my syndicate, as well as viruses aimed at my home computer.
- Always the editor is responsible for touching the ethical line with the writer, members say, whether that is an editor of a single newspaper's editorial page or of a syndicate.
Synonyms society, association, union, alliance, institution, league, guild, coalition, affiliation, consortium, fraternity, order, body, community, club, circle, lodge, clan, set, clique, coterie
2A committee of syndics. 评议会特别委员会
verb ˈsɪndɪkeɪtˈsɪndəˌkeɪt [with object]1Control or manage by a syndicate. 通过辛迪加控制(或管理) Example sentencesExamples - Often a commercial bank will syndicate a large loan by forming a credit group made up of a number of other banks, with each bank providing a certain percentage of the total loan.
- In addition, lenders are now able to issue more debt without needing to syndicate to other banks.
- Similarly, the banks themselves who lent these companies the money to fund their expansion in the first instance are finding it difficult to spread the risk by syndicating the loans to other banks.
- It also appears that syndicated bank lending has come to life over the past few weeks.
- Firms syndicate risks in the design, development, production and distribution of healthcare products and services where profits are indicated.
- They're then bundled, or syndicated, in the secondary market.
- He signed an agreement to borrow a 75 million euro two-year loan syndicated by 18 banks, an unprecedented number of creditors for Bulgaria.
- For good reason, the buyers of these syndicated loans are reassessing their involvement.
- The 7,430 square metre building is being bought for €14.1 million by Harvest Financial Services, which will syndicate the investment.
- It normally works with local banks and has syndicated financing to a number of medium and large projects in infrastructure, manufacturing, property and fisheries.
- We syndicate stores for retailers, which have fixed-price as their model.
- The Bank of England governor attempted to syndicate a rescue throughout the weekend.
- The consortium has been granted a five year syndicated loan of 450 million euro and another one year loan of 200 million euro to finance the buy out.
- $44 billion of U.S. syndicated loans were announced last week, the largest amount in four months.
- Asian corporations outside of Japan have raised some $92 billion through equity initial public offerings, international bond issues and syndicated loans so far this year.
- The background in this case means the commercial world in which syndicated loans were made in 1997, and particularly the extent to which debts created by such loans were traded in a ‘secondary market’ of debt traders.
- It is relatively recently, only, that solicitors could syndicate loans, I think.
- A growing number of individuals are joining syndicated funds to buy commercial and residential property portfolios which give regular rental income and capital growth as property prices appreciate.
Synonyms affiliate, align, connect, join, join up, join forces, attach, combine, team up, band together, be in league, ally, form an alliance, federate, consolidate, incorporate, conjoin, merge, integrate - 1.1 Publish or broadcast (material) simultaneously in a number of newspapers, television stations, etc.
通过稿件辛迪加在多家报刊(或电视台等)同时发表(或广播) her cartoon strip is syndicated in 1,400 newspapers worldwide 她的卡通漫画通过稿件辛迪加在全世界1,400家报纸上同时刊发。 Example sentencesExamples - There is even a section for encouraging specific submitted sites to syndicate their content.
- I'd write one review, which I would syndicate to local newspapers all over Britain.
- Syndicated hosts say they also cover localities, but they must always relate such attention to a national issue.
- United Media syndicates many of the most popular newspaper comic strips, and showcases all its assets for free at Comics.com.
- People will not usually want to syndicate your content until you establish a reputation.
- One of the things we're finding is people need access to the kind of content we have to build up their unrelated businesses, and we can syndicate our content and get paid and get some equity, and can promote our artists more.
- Later the cartoon was syndicated to 2400 newspapers in dozens of countries, reaching an audience of more than 355 million people.
- In the 1960s I wrote a Catholic column syndicated to ten diocesan newspapers.
- One of his points: a lot of newspapers and broadcasters will open their archives and many will syndicate their material.
- It doesn't fit in with the current economic model of TV, which is: make money on the first run, and then make more money by syndicating the show.
- Today, the 67-year-old still writes a twice-weekly advice column for the Washington Post, which is syndicated across the States.
- But reportage has not been limited to the major TV networks and syndicated radio programs.
- Her music has also been broadcast on two nationally syndicated radio programs.
- His weekly newspaper column is syndicated through King features Syndicate.
- If you're syndicating an old show and a few episodes are absent, that may go unnoticed.
- He also hosts a daily radio program syndicated to more than 300 stations nationwide.
- But, at some point, he says, Progress Media will expand by syndicating its shows to other stations.
- There were no tournament games on network television, just syndicated broadcasts of an occasional game.
- Today it is the world's most widely syndicated comic strip, appearing in 2,570 newspapers.
- Most syndicated hosts started local and then moved into syndication with a different program.
- 1.2 Sell (a horse) to a syndicate.
把(赛马)卖给辛迪加 the stallion was syndicated for a record $5.4 million 这匹牡马以540万的创历史新高价卖给了辛迪加。 Example sentencesExamples - Plans call for War Emblem to be sent to Japan, where he will be syndicated, after he runs in the Breeders' Cup Classic on October 26 at Arlington Park.
- Industry sources said the real damage would be done to smaller players in the breeding industry who syndicate stallions in order to reduce the risk.
- ‘We never really talk about the syndication price, but he has been fully syndicated,’ Farish said.
- He will be syndicated and will stand for $8,500 at Wafare.
- Keltos will be syndicated and stand in France or in Ireland, the trainer said.
- The decision is met with widespread criticism in the States, with the detractors pointing to the relatively unserious nature of the injury and the recent deal the owners had made to syndicate the horse for breeding.
- He's not going to be syndicated, and we should be ready to announce the stud fee soon.
- After a successful racing career, Polish Numbers entered stud in 1992 as the first horse syndicated by Northview Stallion Station to stand at the former Windfield Farms.
- Palique will be syndicated for a sum reportedly nearing $150,000.
- The Michael Bell-trained colt was syndicated earlier this month for £6million to stand at the Royal Stud at Sandringham.
- They've already turned down millions to sell or syndicate Alex and kept him running.
- They have to get together and decide if he would stand at Diamond A, or be syndicated, or stand at another farm.
- The four-year-old son of Runaway Groom will be syndicated and stand the 2004 season for $7,500.
- The National Stud plans to syndicate both Pastoral Pursuits and Bahamian Bounty.
- A written business plan may also help you obtain bank financing, expansion, bring in partners or syndicate a horse.
- The six-year-old son of Silver Ghost will be syndicated and stand for $3,000.
- Plans call for him to be sold or syndicated for stud duty.
- The four-year-old Kingmambo colt will be syndicated and stand his initial season for a fee of $6,860 at Haras de Victot near Normandy.
- He confirmed that the colts will stand at Vinery Kentucky and will be syndicated.
- Despite Say Florida Sandy's age, Downey has hopes he can syndicate the hard-knocking horse.
OriginEarly 17th century (denoting a committee of syndics): from French syndicat, from medieval Latin syndicatus, from late Latin syndicus 'delegate of a corporation' (see syndic). Current verb senses date from the late 19th century. Definition of syndicate in US English: syndicatenounˈsɪndɪkətˈsindikət 1A group of individuals or organizations combined to promote some common interest. 辛迪加,企业联合组织 large-scale buyouts involving a syndicate of financial institutions 金融机构组成的财团参与了的大规模收购活动。 犯罪集团。 Example sentencesExamples - Some of these syndicates provide a tax advantage, allowing individuals to invest through their pension contributions.
- The new venture will deliver commercial property investment opportunities in Ireland and abroad to Irish individual, syndicates, intermediaries and advisers.
- The move came after three syndicates revealed a combined total burden of £135m for claims.
- The furthering of agricultural settlements financed by joint-stock companies, syndicates, and individuals symbolized the beginning of a conceptual triumph over the long-standing tradition of piracy.
- Accountability was also non-existent and officials became easy targets for organised crime syndicates.
- He said the suspect was a member of an international drug syndicate.
- In larger transactions, a syndicate of venture capital houses or private equity firms might combine to provide the equity finance.
- Individual private investors tend to buy either on their own, or in syndicates organised by intermediaries with up to 20 investors in any one deal.
- So far as the individual syndicate was concerned, the effect of the spiral was to magnify many times the impact of a particular loss.
- But there are cheaper ways of ownership, such as joining a syndicate.
- Tell me how can an illegal gambling syndicate operate and flourish with police as patrons?
- We have not explored the way in which estimates were made by individual syndicates or individual auditors.
- Bonds can be issued through individuals or syndicates.
- Servicing the debts will obviously involve a net transfer from the company to the syndicate of lenders, not the shareholders.
- The 270 members of the Chamber of Counselors are selected by local councils, professional organizations, and labor syndicates for nine-year terms.
- It is a lucrative business for the syndicate involved.
- By contrast, the syndicates of private investors have become more ambitious.
- Most of the action is initiated by injuries, assorted rumors, and betting syndicates.
- Most land is private property and owned by large business syndicates and individuals.
- The police say there are 238 criminal syndicates operating in the country and across its borders.
Synonyms business, place of business, premises, firm, company, concern, enterprise, venture, organization, operation, undertaking, industry - 1.1 An association or agency supplying material simultaneously to a number of newspapers or periodicals.
报刊辛迪加 Example sentencesExamples - At any rate, I was a bit worried all day that I was going to lose my hall pass, and kept asking my friends who have real jobs with newspapers and syndicates and such if they had an extra holder, to no avail.
- Ironically, online news sites become even more dependent on news agency wholesalers and features syndicates to fill the expanded news hole.
- The editor at your syndicate said that of the 6,500 submissions they get every year, they take only two or three.
- In the meanwhile, newspapers are in trouble and are all too happy to pick up criticism from their affiliated syndicates.
- His syndicate declined to publish the second of the two columns.
- Always the editor is responsible for touching the ethical line with the writer, members say, whether that is an editor of a single newspaper's editorial page or of a syndicate.
- In the world of newspapers, a syndicate distributes information to subscribers, allowing each publication to tailor the content of information it receives.
- No newspaper or syndicate in their right mind should be letting this hateful attempt at humor grace their pages.
- The mushrooming of political parties, syndicates, and newspapers signals a nascent political pluralism upon which democracy can be built.
- Are these stories generated locally or do they come from other sources such as syndicates, wire services or other newspapers?
- Indeed, Stromberg cites Aaron McGruder's ‘The Boondocks’ as a major challenge to the old world order of cartoon syndicates.
- There's a common perception in the West that the only way to become a financially successful cartoonist is to get the newspaper syndicates to pick you up.
- He promptly sent ‘The Boondocks’ off to make the rounds of the news syndicates, and Universal picked him up.
- At any rate, its campaign against me included flash-floods of e-mail intended to shut down servers at my newspaper and my syndicate, as well as viruses aimed at my home computer.
Synonyms society, association, union, alliance, institution, league, guild, coalition, affiliation, consortium, fraternity, order, body, community, club, circle, lodge, clan, set, clique, coterie - 1.2 A committee of syndics.
评议会特别委员会
verbˈsɪndəˌkeɪtˈsindəˌkāt [with object]1Control or manage by a syndicate. 通过辛迪加控制(或管理) the loans are syndicated to a group of banks 贷款由组成辛迪加的一批银行统一办理。 Example sentencesExamples - We syndicate stores for retailers, which have fixed-price as their model.
- A growing number of individuals are joining syndicated funds to buy commercial and residential property portfolios which give regular rental income and capital growth as property prices appreciate.
- For good reason, the buyers of these syndicated loans are reassessing their involvement.
- The Bank of England governor attempted to syndicate a rescue throughout the weekend.
- $44 billion of U.S. syndicated loans were announced last week, the largest amount in four months.
- Similarly, the banks themselves who lent these companies the money to fund their expansion in the first instance are finding it difficult to spread the risk by syndicating the loans to other banks.
- Often a commercial bank will syndicate a large loan by forming a credit group made up of a number of other banks, with each bank providing a certain percentage of the total loan.
- They're then bundled, or syndicated, in the secondary market.
- The consortium has been granted a five year syndicated loan of 450 million euro and another one year loan of 200 million euro to finance the buy out.
- The 7,430 square metre building is being bought for €14.1 million by Harvest Financial Services, which will syndicate the investment.
- The background in this case means the commercial world in which syndicated loans were made in 1997, and particularly the extent to which debts created by such loans were traded in a ‘secondary market’ of debt traders.
- It normally works with local banks and has syndicated financing to a number of medium and large projects in infrastructure, manufacturing, property and fisheries.
- He signed an agreement to borrow a 75 million euro two-year loan syndicated by 18 banks, an unprecedented number of creditors for Bulgaria.
- In addition, lenders are now able to issue more debt without needing to syndicate to other banks.
- It is relatively recently, only, that solicitors could syndicate loans, I think.
- Firms syndicate risks in the design, development, production and distribution of healthcare products and services where profits are indicated.
- It also appears that syndicated bank lending has come to life over the past few weeks.
- Asian corporations outside of Japan have raised some $92 billion through equity initial public offerings, international bond issues and syndicated loans so far this year.
Synonyms affiliate, align, connect, join, join up, join forces, attach, combine, team up, band together, be in league, ally, form an alliance, federate, consolidate, incorporate, conjoin, merge, integrate - 1.1 Publish or broadcast (material) simultaneously in a number of newspapers, television stations, etc.
通过稿件辛迪加在多家报刊(或电视台等)同时发表(或广播) his reports were syndicated to 200 other papers Example sentencesExamples - People will not usually want to syndicate your content until you establish a reputation.
- Later the cartoon was syndicated to 2400 newspapers in dozens of countries, reaching an audience of more than 355 million people.
- One of the things we're finding is people need access to the kind of content we have to build up their unrelated businesses, and we can syndicate our content and get paid and get some equity, and can promote our artists more.
- Most syndicated hosts started local and then moved into syndication with a different program.
- Syndicated hosts say they also cover localities, but they must always relate such attention to a national issue.
- But, at some point, he says, Progress Media will expand by syndicating its shows to other stations.
- If you're syndicating an old show and a few episodes are absent, that may go unnoticed.
- It doesn't fit in with the current economic model of TV, which is: make money on the first run, and then make more money by syndicating the show.
- In the 1960s I wrote a Catholic column syndicated to ten diocesan newspapers.
- One of his points: a lot of newspapers and broadcasters will open their archives and many will syndicate their material.
- His weekly newspaper column is syndicated through King features Syndicate.
- He also hosts a daily radio program syndicated to more than 300 stations nationwide.
- I'd write one review, which I would syndicate to local newspapers all over Britain.
- Her music has also been broadcast on two nationally syndicated radio programs.
- United Media syndicates many of the most popular newspaper comic strips, and showcases all its assets for free at Comics.com.
- There is even a section for encouraging specific submitted sites to syndicate their content.
- There were no tournament games on network television, just syndicated broadcasts of an occasional game.
- But reportage has not been limited to the major TV networks and syndicated radio programs.
- Today it is the world's most widely syndicated comic strip, appearing in 2,570 newspapers.
- Today, the 67-year-old still writes a twice-weekly advice column for the Washington Post, which is syndicated across the States.
- 1.2 Sell (a horse) to a syndicate.
把(赛马)卖给辛迪加 the stallion was syndicated for a record $5.4 million 这匹牡马以540万的创历史新高价卖给了辛迪加。 Example sentencesExamples - They have to get together and decide if he would stand at Diamond A, or be syndicated, or stand at another farm.
- The decision is met with widespread criticism in the States, with the detractors pointing to the relatively unserious nature of the injury and the recent deal the owners had made to syndicate the horse for breeding.
- Palique will be syndicated for a sum reportedly nearing $150,000.
- The six-year-old son of Silver Ghost will be syndicated and stand for $3,000.
- He will be syndicated and will stand for $8,500 at Wafare.
- ‘We never really talk about the syndication price, but he has been fully syndicated,’ Farish said.
- A written business plan may also help you obtain bank financing, expansion, bring in partners or syndicate a horse.
- The four-year-old son of Runaway Groom will be syndicated and stand the 2004 season for $7,500.
- Despite Say Florida Sandy's age, Downey has hopes he can syndicate the hard-knocking horse.
- Plans call for him to be sold or syndicated for stud duty.
- The four-year-old Kingmambo colt will be syndicated and stand his initial season for a fee of $6,860 at Haras de Victot near Normandy.
- Keltos will be syndicated and stand in France or in Ireland, the trainer said.
- Plans call for War Emblem to be sent to Japan, where he will be syndicated, after he runs in the Breeders' Cup Classic on October 26 at Arlington Park.
- The National Stud plans to syndicate both Pastoral Pursuits and Bahamian Bounty.
- The Michael Bell-trained colt was syndicated earlier this month for £6million to stand at the Royal Stud at Sandringham.
- Industry sources said the real damage would be done to smaller players in the breeding industry who syndicate stallions in order to reduce the risk.
- They've already turned down millions to sell or syndicate Alex and kept him running.
- After a successful racing career, Polish Numbers entered stud in 1992 as the first horse syndicated by Northview Stallion Station to stand at the former Windfield Farms.
- He confirmed that the colts will stand at Vinery Kentucky and will be syndicated.
- He's not going to be syndicated, and we should be ready to announce the stud fee soon.
OriginEarly 17th century (denoting a committee of syndics): from French syndicat, from medieval Latin syndicatus, from late Latin syndicus ‘delegate of a corporation’ (see syndic). Current verb senses date from the late 19th century. |