英:['fʌndʒɪbl]
美:['fʌndʒəbəl]
英:['fʌndʒɪbl]
美:['fʌndʒəbəl]
fun·gi·ble
fun j bl
词根:fungible
n.fungibility 可替代性;可互换
adjective
being something (such as money or a commodity) of such a nature that one part or quantity may be replaced by another equal part or quantity in paying a debt or settling an account fungible goods
Oil, wheat, and lumber are fungible commodities.
capable of mutual substitution : interchangeable
… the court's postulate that male and female jurors must be regarded as fungible—George Will
readily changeable to adapt to new situations : flexible
Managers typically use more than a hundred different lineups over the course of the season. Batting orders are so fungible that few players last long in one spot.—Tom Verducci
noun
something that is fungible (see fungible entry 1 sense 1) : a good one part or quantity of which can be substituted for another of equal value in satisfying an obligation—usually used in plural
Fungibles may be valued by weight or measure.
"可替代的; 可被替换的",1818年,最初是法律用语,源自中世纪拉丁语 fungibilis,来自拉丁语 fungi "执行"(见 function(n.)),通过诸如 fungi vice "代替"等短语。早在1765年就已经作为名词使用。
可替代
代替物
Adjective and Noun New Latin fungibilis, from Latin fungi to perform — more at function
The first known use of fungible was in 1649
funnel1 of 2noun
a utensil usually shaped like a hollow cone with a tube extending from the point and used to catch and direct a downward flow (as of liquid)
something shaped like a funnel
the funnel cloud of a tornado
a large pipe for the escape of smoke or for ventilation (as on a ship)
funnel2 of 2verb
to move or cause to move to a central point or into a central channel
funkyadjective
having a bad smell
down-to-earth in style and feelingespecially: having the style and feeling of funk
a funky beat
odd in appearance or feeling
stylish in an untypical way : hip sense 1
funky clothes
funkyadjective
having a bad smell
down-to-earth in style and feelingespecially: having the style and feeling of funk
a funky beat
odd in appearance or feeling
stylish in an untypical way : hip sense 1
funky clothes
funk1 of 4noun
a strong bad smell
funk2 of 4verb
to be or become frightened of
to shrink back from in fear
funk3 of 4noun
great fear
a depressed state of mind
coward
slump entry 2
the team went into a funk
funk4 of 4noun
music that combines forms of blues, gospel, or soul music and has a strong backbeat
funk1 of 4noun
a strong bad smell
funk2 of 4verb
to be or become frightened of
to shrink back from in fear
funk3 of 4noun
great fear
a depressed state of mind
coward
slump entry 2
the team went into a funk
funk4 of 4noun
music that combines forms of blues, gospel, or soul music and has a strong backbeat
funicularnoun
a cable railway going up a mountain
fungusnoun
any of a kingdom of living things (as molds, rusts, mildews, smuts, and mushrooms) that lack chlorophyll, are parasitic or live on dead or decaying organic matter, and were formerly considered plants
infection with a fungus
fungicidenoun
a substance that destroys fungi
fungibleadjective
having such a nature that one part or quantity may be replaced by another part or quantity to satisfy an obligation
capable of being interchanged
flexible sense 2
1 “Wellness,” as it turns out, can be a rather fungible idea, stretched to include eating poke bowls and kale salads by day and enjoying inebriating substances while the music pulsates late into the night.
2 The onshore yuan is largely fungible with CNH and, under normal market conditions, their exchange rates tend to move together.
3 The whole nature of an oral tradition is that it’s fungible and that it’s adaptable.
4 They’re fungible, and humans move in and out them, and back and forth, with texts penetrating each other.
5 “It’s a little bit fungible, and has been in literary history,” he said, “and that feels so appropriate for this book.”
6 Critics say that money is fungible and the deal frees up Tehran to use other funds to build up its own military or to continue funding allies such as Hamas or Lebanon-based Hezbollah.
7 But truth seems to have become an increasingly fungible concept.
8 Most tokens are fungible: that is to say, exchangeable, like for like, as with dollars or gold bars or GameStop shares.
9 The meaning is fungible but the delivery system is not.
10 But only if your granny believed in making choices based on immutable human law instead of fungible social mores.
11 Speaking to reporters in Iowa at the weekend, DeSantis pushed back on the fact the funds had not yet been transferred to Iran, saying that money was "fungible."
12 Sales of gold COINS have soared as savers seek a safer and fungible source of value.
储户在寻求一个更加安全和可替代的价值资料,因此金币的销售量猛增。
13 But attention is neither a currency nor a commodity. It can, to some extent, be bought and sold. But it cannot be traded to third parties, and it is not entirely fungible.
但是关注度既不是商品也不是货币,虽然在某种程度上来说它可以被买卖,但是它确不能与第三方交易,并且是完全不可替代的。
14 And the workers are increasingly being treated less atomistically, as creative individuals to encourage maximum yield, but as fungible, nondescript individuals in an ever-replaceable pool of actors.
15 Money is fungible.
货币是可替换物。
16 His identity is entirely fungible, with no core ideology or personality remaining.
17 Goods which are not fungible shall be deemed fungible for the purposes of this act to the extent that under a particular agreement or document unlike units are treated as equivalents.
为本法的目的,并使在一项特定协议或文件中的不相似单位也可被视为相等物,则非可替代货物应被视为可替代的。
18 Then again, Booster is more knowledgeable than NBA star and NFT-promoter Blake Griffin, who explains the term fungible to mean "it's fun but manageable."
19 To evoke it, Harrison creates a language in which the natural and the artificial are fully fungible.
20 That’s because, for him, ideas are an entirely fungible currency that he deploys primarily to maintain the attention and adulation of his — and it is increasingly his alone — GOP “base.”
1 可替换的
2 可代替的
4 替代物
5 可互换的