dollar 的定义
- a paper money, silver or cupronickel coin, and monetary unit of the United States, equal to 100 cents. Symbol: $
- a silver or nickel coin and monetary unit of Canada, equal to 100 cents. Symbol: $
- any of the monetary units of various other nations, as Australia, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, East Timor, Fiji, Guyana, Hong Kong, Jamaica, Liberia, New Zealand, Singapore, the Solomon Islands, Trinidad and Tobago, and Zimbabwe, equal to 100 cents.
- Also called ringgit. a cupronickel coin and monetary unit of Brunei, equal to 100 sen.
- ringgit.
- a thaler.
- a peso.
- Levant dollar.
- yuan.
- British Slang. five-shilling piece; crown.the sum of five shillings.
dollar 近义词
paper money
由dollar构成的短语
- dollars to doughnuts, it's
- feel like a million dollars
- look like a million dollars
- you can bet your ass (bottom dollar)
更多dollar例句
- Ransomware is a tried-and-true criminal business model that generates millions of dollars in revenue every year.
- As ad dollars shift from traditional TV to streaming, CTV platforms, streaming aggregators and individual media companies are similarly vying to situate themselves to be the one managing that money.
- After it would have likely spent tens of billions of dollars to purchase TikTok, the best thing Microsoft could do to recoup that money may be to do not much at all.
- ByteDance has been pouring billions of dollars into TikTok annually.
- That would be a particular issue for the upfront advertisers that commit to spend millions of dollars with Hulu in exchange for a guaranteed number of impressions.
- It was a very faithful homage to a Six Million Dollar Man episode.
- Neither could her three-week, multi-thousand dollar stay, which was supposed to be a recovery period.
- It is a multimillion-dollar business in which roughly 15 million fowl die a year.
- Meanwhile, big dollar advertising campaigns have taken an explicit rainbow-hued slant.
- There may be no entrapped pool of human talent left on earth with the dollar value of Cuban athletes.
- The lack of bill buyers in foreign countries who will quote as low rates on dollar as on sterling bills.
- At that time, the postage on letters from that region was very high, sometimes as much as fifty or sixty cents, or even a dollar.
- In the metal of the tenor several coins are visible, one being a Spanish dollar of 1742.
- It stands at one extreme of our currency, with a dollar of gold set aside behind each dollar of paper.
- Not a dollar did he possess—not even did he have a suit of clothes any more, and wore every day his corduroys.