英:['kɒɪnə]
美:['kɔɪnə]
英:['kɒɪnə]
美:['kɔɪnə]
词根:coin
n.coin 硬币,钱币
coinage 造币;[金融] 货币制度;新造的字及其语等
vt.coin 铸造(货币);杜撰,创造
noun
corner, cornerstone, quoin
wedge
a usually flat piece of metal issued by governmental authority as money
metal money
something resembling a coin especially in shape
a unit of a cryptocurrency
I also caution market participants against promoting or touting the offer and sale of coins without first determining whether the securities laws apply to those actions.—Jay Clayton
something used as if it were money (as in verbal or intellectual exchange) would repay him with the full coin of his mind—Ian Fleming
perhaps wisecracks … are respectable literary coin in the U.S.—The Times Literary Supplement (London)
something having two different and usually opposing sides—usually used in the phrase the other side of the coin
informal money
I'm in it for the coin—Sinclair Lewis
verb
transitive verb
to make (a coin) especially by stamping : mint
to convert (metal) into coins
create, invent
coin a phrase
adjective
of or relating to coins
operated by coins
Noun Middle English, from Anglo-French coing wedge, corner, from Latin cuneus wedge
The first known use of coin was in the 14th century
coke1 of 3noun
gray lumps of fuel with pores made by heating soft coal in a closed chamber until some of its gases have passed off
coke2 of 3noun
cocaine
Coke3 of 3trademark
—used for a cola drink
coitusnoun
sexual intercourse
coitusnoun
sexual intercourse
coirnoun
a stiff coarse fiber from the outer husk of a coconut
coin1 of 3noun
a piece of metal put out by a government authority as money
metal money
three dollars in coin
coin2 of 3verb
to make (a coin) especially by stamping : mint
to convert (metal) into coins
create, invent
coin a phrase
coin3 of 3adjective
of or relating to coins
a coin show
operated by coins
a laundromat's coin washers
coin1 of 3noun
a piece of metal put out by a government authority as money
metal money
three dollars in coin
coin2 of 3verb
to make (a coin) especially by stamping : mint
to convert (metal) into coins
create, invent
coin a phrase
coin3 of 3adjective
of or relating to coins
a coin show
operated by coins
a laundromat's coin washers
coin1 of 3noun
a piece of metal put out by a government authority as money
metal money
three dollars in coin
coin2 of 3verb
to make (a coin) especially by stamping : mint
to convert (metal) into coins
create, invent
coin a phrase
coin3 of 3adjective
of or relating to coins
a coin show
operated by coins
a laundromat's coin washers
1 But you really know you’ve goofed when you make the most bloodthirsty governor in US history and coiner of the term “misunderestimated” look like some sort of empathetic genius.
2 At the time, Columbia law professor Tim Wu, a chief advocate of “net neutrality” and coiner of the term, erupted, demanding such agreements be blocked.
3 How widely different from your poets this—your men of high sentiment and sordid action—your coiners of fine phrases, hollow-hearted and empty!'
4 To present-day readers Hook is known only as the subject of many a merry anecdote, the coiner of epigrams, and one of the most celebrated practical jokers of his time.
5 Either way, though, Shakespeare was certainly a coiner of "fire-new words" – and the origins and histories of words rarely fail to stir controversy.
6 He is the coiner of #BlackLivesMatter, and author of four books, including the forthcoming “Radical Reparations.”
7 But for the visiting team that gives it up, it is an especially horrible moment, even when its coiner was on the mound.
8 Several highwaymen, horse-stealers, and coiners, are also included in this gloomy list, which is adorned with a woodcut of an execution.
9 In fact, the coiner of that phrase was one of those who soon felt its bite.
实际上这句名言的创造者也象其他被咬的人一样,感到它的厉害。
10 Hunter is a professor of sociology and the inaugural chair of African American studies at UCLA, the coiner of #BlackLivesMatter and the author of four books.
11 Melt it down again; there's no loss in it, for the coining costs the coiners nothing.
12 Mr. Arnold is far more than 'a coiner of sweet words'—he is the exponent of noble impressions.
13 After the war, President Grover Cleveland appointed him coiner at the U.S.
14 It is not necessary for coiners to make absolutely pure gold, but to heat it only until such a fineness is obtained as is needed for the gold money which they are coining.
15 This gave further opportunities to the counterfeit coiners.
16 William Shakespeare is believed to have coined many words.
17 No inquiry was made as to the right of the coiners; whoever knew how to manage fire and metal, engaged in this kind of work.
18 This method of washing is rarely used by miners, but frequently by coiners and goldsmiths when they wash gold, silver, or copper.
19 Recently, the coupling has been consecrated with a neologism: philanthro-capitalism, which describes the belief, as the coiners of the term explained, that “the rich can save the world ” by channeling market forces toward philanthropic ends.
20 After that period, in the order of things, the coiners formed themselves into a close corporation, with masters, associates, and apprentices, and held jealously to their privileges.