词汇 | pocketbook |
释义 | pocketbook noun[ C ] uk /ˈpɒk.ɪt.bʊk/ us /ˈpɑː.kɪt.bʊk/ pocketbooknoun[C] (BOOK)a small book that can be carried in your pocket: The title of this little pocketbook is "an Essential Guide to Rome". Even pocketbooks are quite expensive, especially when you read as much as I do. Books: kinds of books abridgment annual anthology audiobook backlist crime digest dime novel e-reader easy read multi-volume must-read novel novelette novelistic trilogy vade mecum workbook ya young adult pocketbooknoun[C] (AVAILABLE MONEY)US the money that someone has, or someone's ability to pay for things: 财力,购买力 These new tax laws will hit everyone's pocketbook.这些新的税收政策将会影响每个人的经济利益。 Voters don't all realize how much the results could affect their pocketbooks.并非所有的投票者都意识到了投票结果对他们的经济利益会有多大影响。 These hotels are too much for most people's pocketbooks. The pandemic left a big hole in the pocketbooks of many people. There is food for every taste and pocketbook. Amounts of money balance bank bounty buck capital circumstance coin fisc float holdback living wage money supply payout pool sub sum surplus trough wherewithal your daily breadidiom pocketbooknoun[C] (CONTAINER)USold-fashioned a small bag for money, keys, make-up, etc., carried especially by women: (尤指女式)手提包,手袋 I need a new pocketbook to go with these shoes.我需要一个新手提包来配这双鞋。 She put the mirror back in her pocketbook. Synonym purse digibabe/iStock/Getty Images Plus/GettyImages USold-fashioned a small folding case for carrying money: 钱包 She only had a ten-dollar bill in her pocketbook. I took a 50-cent piece from my pocketbook and gave it to the man. Synonym wallet Containers for carrying personal possessions attaché case baggage baggage allowance billfold bindle briefcase excess baggage garment bag grip hand luggage handbag hatbox pannier rucksack sack saddlebag satchel schoolbag sling sponge bag pocketbook adjective[ before noun ] USus/ˈpɑː.kɪt.bʊk/ relating to how much money people have, or their ability to pay for things: pocketbook issuePocketbook issues are the main priority for voters. White House figures appeared out of touch with the pocketbook concerns of ordinary Americans. Economics accommodative anti-economic anti-inflation anti-inflationary anti-recession buyer's market deindustrialization economic Great Recession gross domestic product HDI human development index Keynesian monetarism monetary recession reflate retrench squeeze the public purse pocketbook | American Dictionarypocketbook noun[ C ] us/ˈpɑk·ɪtˌbʊk/(alsobag); (handbag); (purse) a bag, often with a handle or a strap going over the shoulder, used esp. by women for carrying money and small items such as keys: I have a map in my pocketbook. Someone’s pocketbook is that person's finances or ability to pay for something: The sales tax hits consumers in the pocketbook. Examples of pocketbookpocketbook He'd save up all the money he earned or obtained and every two weeks head down and buy as many pocketbooks as he could afford. From Wikipedia This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. Later he would claim that the advent of pocketbooks saved his literary life. From Wikipedia This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. The freshwater drum was tested in comparison to the fat pocketbooks reproductive cycle and it has proven not to differ from other freshwater mussels. From Wikipedia This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. Except in the pocketbook, strikes in the healthcare setting generally do not directly hurt the employer. In such a setting, many would expect that sociotropic rather than pocketbook considerations would dominate the vote decision. First, the pocketbook has a sizeable and statistically highly reliable effect on the vote. Change in personal economic situation during past 3 months.* expected pocketbook, polled. First, the variables are not only differently scaled, but the pocketbook variable is qualitative, while most of the sociotropic variables are quantitative. The validity of our pocketbook item can be assessed by comparing its reported changes with other reported aspects of economic behaviour. They give much weaker results, both individually and together, than the pocketbook variables. I'd go out and hit kids and take their money and rob everybody's pocketbooks. From Wikipedia This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. The sales of the pocketbooks increased from 8,000 copies within a 3 to 4 month period to 10,000 copies over a period of 2 to 3 months, including provincial sales. From Wikipedia This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. The downward trend in the coefficient on the pocketbook variable may be explained by the steadily increasing proportion of respondents reporting unchanged personal economic circumstances (r 0.88, for 9). His works which include 44 pocketbooks and 32 complete works are based on his lectures, which were recorded first in shorthand and since 1960 on audio and video tape. From Wikipedia This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license. Again, the rise of the pocketbook in the 1770s is noted, while the years between 1740 and 1820 are described as "a critical transformative period" (375). See all examples of pocketbook These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
随便看 |
反思网英语在线翻译词典收录了377474条英语词汇在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用英语词汇的中英文双语翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。