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英文字典中文字典相关资料:


  • Money vs Monies - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    How would the meaning in the following phrase change if "monies" is replaced with "money"? universities would be diverted from basic research by the lure of new development monies from “the
  • grammatical number - When do you use monies in plural? - English . . .
    But in law and accounting, money is a countable noun which can be pluralized to express the idea of individual sum of money; in this case you can use both "moneys" and "monies"
  • What is a word for overconsumption with the goal of getting your money . . .
    Though not a single word as requested, you could try the common phrase: Squeezing [all] the <fun enjoyment etc > out of to get or obtain something from someone with difficulty, or to cause something to happen by a continuous and difficult effort Cambridge Dictionary This implies that there is still something to be obtained from the task, but it comes at great effort, and that the source will
  • Where does the expression “money talks” come from?
    According to the The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms the saying “money talks” meaning: Wealth has great influence, may derive from: The idea behind this idiom was stated by Euripide
  • expressions - How do you say more moneys? - English Language Usage . . .
    How could one express it? Assume an informal setting In other languages, one could say something that roughly translates to "I made a good deal, now I have more moneys!", and it would be clear that the total pecuniary worth is less than what I started with
  • Origins and meaning of Put your money where your mouth is
    Origin of the Phrase According to Christine Ammer, The Facts on File Dictionary of Clichés, second edition (2006), the phrase has been around in the United States since approximately 1930: put one's money where one's mouth is Back up your stated position with action This term, according to Eric Partridge's informants, was current in the United States from at least 1930 and caught on in Great
  • Meaning of Object in the expression If money were no object.
    Were there any antecedents for the expression "money is no object"? C T Onions, " 'Distance No Object'," in Needed Words, issues 31–40 (1931 [?]) offers a detailed analysis of the emergence of object (in the forms "no object" and "not an object") with the meaning "obstacle" or "major consideration " I will quote from it at length because it is a remarkably thorough account and because it
  • Should years worth have an apostrophe? [duplicate]
    Maybe this is a dumb question If I was writing the sentence quot;following years worth of research quot;, would it be correct to write quot;years worth quot; or quot;years' worth quot;? My
  • Is it “If money were not an object” or “If money were not an option”?
    I always say "money is no object" (well, I would if it weren't— sigh), and I never say "money is not an option" I suspect that "option" is a newer variant, based on a mishearing of "object", since it doesn't make much sense when you think about it "Object" and "issue" are established idioms; I have my doubts about "option" In books, "money is no object" is certainly the commonest form, as
  • Funds or Money? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I'm having an ongoing dispute in my organization over whether to use the word "funds" or "money" to describe, um, money that we award to grant applicants My position is that a fund holds money





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