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