in-kind / ˈɪnˌkaɪnd /

💦中学词汇实物实体物质真品

in-kind 的定义

adj. 形容词 adjective
  1. paid or given in goods, commodities, or services instead of money: in-kind welfare programs.
  2. paying or returning something of the same kind as that received or offered.

更多in-kind例句

  1. Submission is less a novel of ideas than a political book, and of the most subversive kind.
  2. His discourse is now more detailed: submission, which is the meaning of islam in Arabic, gives him a kind of enjoyment.
  3. Patrick Klugman, the deputy mayor of Paris, said: “We are living our kind of 9/11,” he said.
  4. When I was in Holland, this is the kind of thing people feared.
  5. He appeared to understand however belatedly that he was in the presence of another kind of greatness.
  6. Kind of a reception-room in there—guess I know a reception-room from a hole in the wall.
  7. The relation existing between the balmy plant and the commerce of the world is of the strongest kind.
  8. "She used to be so well—so bright," said Angela, who also appeared to have the desire to say something kind and comfortable.
  9. What he has done in any one species or distinct kind of writing would have been sufficient to have acquired him a great name.
  10. I tell you, madam, most distinctly and emphatically, that it is bread pudding and the meanest kind at that.'