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单词 exchange
释义

Definition of exchange in English:

exchange

noun ɪksˈtʃeɪndʒɛksˈtʃeɪndʒɪksˈtʃeɪndʒ
  • 1An act of giving one thing and receiving another (especially of the same kind) in return.

    交换;互换;调换

    negotiations should lead to an exchange of land for peace

    谈判的最终结果应该是以土地换和平。

    mass noun opportunities for the exchange of information

    交换信息的良机。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In exchange, New York received pitcher Pedro Ramos.
    • The act is aimed at preventing the movement of terrorist funds, and enhancing the exchange of information about financial transactions with foreign countries.
    • During negotiations over a prisoner exchange, English officials handed over this list to the French intermediary, Rigaud de Vaudreuil.
    • In exchange, Kansas will receive approximately 17% of tribal casino revenue.
    • In exchange, each student received a candy bar and a pencil.
    • The lower capital gains rates apply to sales or exchanges received after May 5, 2003.
    • Its aim is to develop standards for almost everything, to facilitate the international exchange of goods and services, and foster scientific research.
    • There remains much that needs to be done in order to make the Internet a widely acceptable marketplace for the exchange of goods and services between merchants and consumers.
    • We do not have to run millions of experiments to see that people value the good received in an exchange over the good given away.
    • In exchange, the taxpayers receive $10 million in annual rent, which will never come close to reimbursing the city and state for their costs.
    • When he returned North, following an exchange of prisoners, he was given a series of ovations and testimonials and had dinner with Abraham Lincoln, with whom he became friendly.
    • The second floor, which is accessed via a freight elevator, provides a needle exchange service that operates four day per week, four to six hours/day.
    • Costumes and accessories are not refundable and can only be returned for an exchange.
    • When a prisoner exchange provided him with a chance to return to his native Groton, his relatives had to come to take him by force back to his birthplace.
    • The government and rebels remain far apart on conditions for a prisoner exchange.
    • After calling the store and assuring the person that she did indeed know how to match the coloured wire to the same coloured connection on the system, they instructed her to return it for an exchange.
    • Should the Cubs find a taker who can sign Sammy long-term at any point in the season, be it February, May or July, they should still receive a reasonable exchange.
    • U.N. correspondents were at Panmunjom covering Operation Little Switch, a prisoner exchange.
    • The agreement establishes commissions to delineate the disputed border and provides for the exchange of prisoners and the return of displaced people.
    • No returns or exchanges unless the item is faulty or not as described.
    Synonyms
    interchange, trade, trading, trade-off, swapping, barter, giving and taking, traffic, trafficking, bandying, reciprocity
    archaic truck
    1. 1.1 A visit or visits in which two people or groups from different countries stay with each other or do each other's jobs.
      (不同国家间两个学者或两个学术团体之间的)交流访问
      as modifier an exchange visit to Germany
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The culmination of the exchange was a visit to Foxford by the German students and teachers recently.
      • Despite the serious nature of the expertise shared by the lifesavers, Moreton College's Rob Kreisler said the exchange visit was also a chance to build friendships across the Atlantic.
      • The first leg of the exchange involved a week-long visit to Lisbon of various Belfast artists involved in the project to take the art of Belfast to the Portugese capital.
      • Plans are also underway for an exchange visit from members of an orchestra in Prague in April.
      • The latest exchange visit was hailed as a great success by Mr Shaw and he is making fresh appeals for people to get involved in creating even closer links between York and Munster.
      • The target's dependent is in a student exchange program-BECOME THAT EXCHANGE STUDENT
      • Highlights included visiting America in an exchange programme, a parachute jump and qualifying to fly solo.
      • It was the fourth time there has been an exchange visit for students of both towns.
      • Emmanuel said a St Lucian team will be preparing for an exchange visit from St Vincent, in mid-December, to engage in a variety of sporting disciplines.
      • A Ugandan teacher on an exchange visit to Ingleton Middle School is keeping warm in the cold Northern climes by teaching pupils how to play African drums.
      • is a common statement heard among those who have recently returned from an exchange, only to realise that others are barely interested in hearing about their adventures.
      • The group, which consists of 5 teachers and 26 school children are on an exchange visit with Moylough Primary School.
      • The culmination of the exchange was a visit by the Foxford Transition Years to Ratingen in March and a return visit to Foxford by the German students and teachers last week.
      • This requires intensifying the dialogue between them by multiplying the exchange of visits focused on the political and economic activity fields.
      • Ms Morrison-Tohol and Ms Wennmacher were in Castlebar accompanying a group from the Hochstadt Kolping Familie on an exchange visit with the local Scouts.
      • A delegation from Chippenham visited Uganda in February last year and this was meant to be the exchange visit for the Ugandans.
      • They flew from Manchester Airport on April 11 after education officials were told there was no need to cancel the cultural exchange visit.
      • Meanwhile Hamburg and St. Petersburg were, for the first time, able to arrange personal visits and school exchanges.
      • Defending solicitor Victor Clarke stated that Mr Ploet was in Ireland five months as part of a farming exchange and intended to return to France next week.
      • He admitted some people had questioned the value of the Caribbean trip and suggested an exchange visit to Pakistan or India would be more relevant.
  • 2mass noun The changing of money to its equivalent in the currency of another country.

    汇兑;兑换

    they provided me with currency exchange at competitive rates
    Example sentencesExamples
    • They never knew about the two-room flats and sleeping rooms he rented, the weekly money orders sent home, the currency exchange.
    • The report urged they must hedge against currency exchange risks to protect themselves from the fluctuation of the greenback.
    • Chinese tourism in Taiwan has been allowed under limited conditions in the past, but Chinese currency exchange has never been offered before at local banks.
    • It is believed that the trend may help to realize the free exchange of currency, preparing the ground for the Renminbi to be an international currency.
    • Finance is often thought of as the sphere of global flows and so it is in terms of currency exchange or direct investment.
    • Most of its business was in currency exchange and retail banking and its paid-up capital was only one million pounds sterling, one third that of HSBC.
    • On the positive front, if sterling remains at current levels, the negative currency exchange impact that has hit earnings from Britain this year should have worked its way through by next year.
    • Sure, they benefited from favorable currency exchange, but what's going on here?
    • The benefits include only one currency exchange, transparency of prices via a united shopping market and no risk of fluctuations between countries.
    • Consistent with the shift toward a new government in Iraq run by the Iraqi people, coalition forces are playing only a minor role in the currency exchange program.
    • Beneficial receipt may also arise from currency exchange.
    • Currenex, a new business-to-business independent foreign currency exchange, expects to sign its first major client in Ireland in the coming weeks.
    • The daily trade in currency exchange alone is more than 50 times the value of world trade in goods and services.
    • Another fact is that currency exchange is a profitable business because there is demand.
    • However, some shops may ask you to pay in sterling and may apply currency exchange and commission rates which are unfavourable.
    • Rates of exchange should be based on this one currency, which can be used for payment of all international trade.
    • This action would eliminate currency exchange risks and risks attached to purchasing goods from an economy with a hugely inflated currency.
    • The cost of currency exchange has also pushed prices higher.
    • Revenue has grown only 1.4% annually over the past five years, depressed partly by currency exchange fluctuations.
    • There was a negative currency exchange adjustment totalling €84 million in the last half-year.
    1. 2.1count noun A system or market in which commercial transactions involving currency, shares, etc. can be carried out within or between countries.
      交易系统;交易所。参见FOREIGN EXCHANGE
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The small and midsize companies that mostly list on the exchanges have very few shares outstanding.
      • Shire has little surplus cash in its balance sheet, so a paper-based reverse takeover via a share exchange would be the most probable route to a takeover.
      • ‘Taiwan and Japan have shared increasingly close economic exchanges,’ Chen told his guest at the presidential office.
      • Stable trade should be carried out through exchanges among business enterprises and agricultural organizations.
      • Advocates of more minimal government might argue that people have every right to such food as they can obtain through fair market exchanges and gifts.
      • The portal will provide property listings, information and data research, and in the long term will be a transaction exchange for the industry.
      • The exchange of currencies involves transaction costs.
      • Commercial exchange, conducted at urban markets, was subject to elaborate customs and taxation.
      • The concept requires some knowledge of markets and exchanges, so traders are seen as the core member base.
      • On economic issues, the two parties agreed to cooperate toward pursuing the realization of direct shipping links, agricultural exchanges and a common market across the strait.
      • Economic exchanges within Vietnam and abroad are in full flow, and Hoa Hao followers are deeply engaged in marketing activities.
      • The dollar's slide on the currency exchanges has led economists to predict the pound sterling will soon be worth two dollars, which all adds up to massive discounts for British shoppers in the US.
      • London's Alternative Investment Market, supposedly the dogsbody of share exchanges, is enjoying a social whirl, while the ugly sister of the main market sits out the dance.
      • In this manner, thriving nations could come to North and South Korea through cultural, athletic, political, economic and commercial exchanges.
      • The fact that the new distribution arose from market transactions is irrelevant, since no one had any right to transfer those resources through market exchanges.
      • Conventional share trading on exchanges is, in many respects, yesterday's way of doing business.
      • The play, though it is chronologically out of place, presents further elaborations on the figuring of identity, and metaphors of market and commercial exchange.
      • You can browse among the hundreds of foreign companies that list their shares on U.S. exchanges using American depositary receipts.
      • Geography acts in a similar manner, because the costs of overcoming space in order to carry out market exchanges incur transport-transactions costs.
      • Ever since, the seat has lost almost half its value as the exchange's market share and profits have come under pressure.
    2. 2.2count noun A building or institution used for the trading of a particular commodity or commodities.
      商品交易所
      the old Corn Exchange
      Example sentencesExamples
      • As the braying traders on the commodity exchanges in London and New York sold Rwanda's coffee and tin they were sealing the fate of peasants 6,000 miles away.
      • Traders on commodity exchanges are warning that a cold winter in the northern hemisphere could see prices, already up 38% since the start of the year, rise a lot further.
      • PROS AND CONS But regulators, exchanges, and institutions should be wary of unintended consequences.
      • Wyatt was a broker working for Itex, one of the nation's largest barter exchanges.
      • In particular circumstances the rules of an exchange or clearing house may be expressly incorporated into customers' contracts with members.
      • That means two commodity exchanges, on one floor.
      • The reforms, however, should focus on improving the transparency of the exchange's operations and governance rather than imposing new rules.
      • According to experts of the economic ministry, it has not been decided yet whether the grain is to be sold on commodity exchanges.
      • Imagine multiple trading exchanges and other e-commerce vendors that must all collaborate and charge so a single transaction can be completed.
      • Why this material is included while other material unique to, e.g., commodities or exchanges, is referenced out is not clear.
      • Currently, the SCE is one of the three licensed commodity exchanges in the country.
      • These are readily available free from several of the commodity exchanges.
      • The five New York commodity futures exchanges will reopen today, a spokesman said yesterday.
      • Finally, the CFTC exists primarily to protect commodities investors and the exchanges, areas where Enron was not particularly active.
      • All exchanges and financial institutions had back-up power systems that allowed them to conduct business as usual.
      • A hedger locks in a price for a cash commodity by cross-hedging that commodity with a related commodity traded at one of the commodity exchanges.
      • In recent years, Hong Kong has lost market share to exchanges in London and New York, where spreads are narrower, on stocks that are listed on more than one exchange.
      • Indeed, the committee wants the European Commission to bar exchanges from owning clearing houses.
      • Neither the exchanges nor brokerage houses have taken up Levitt's challenge.
      • Agricultural commodity exchanges, for instance, are not subjected to the same insider trading legislation as securities.
      Synonyms
      stock exchange, money market, bourse
  • 3A short conversation or an argument.

    交谈;争论

    there was a heated exchange

    当时发生了激烈的争论。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • What began as a heated exchange of words soon became full-blown fisticuffs.
    • In Right Appetite, they developed a movement conversation with rapid exchanges, flirtatious teasing, even telling silences.
    • There were heated exchanges at the meeting, with Mr Martin making an impassioned speech defending his position.
    • Then after the brief exchange, the two office workers go their own ways, never to meet again.
    • I am distracted from further conversation by an expanding exchange on MSN Messenger.
    • No closing ranks, no calling ‘skank’, not even a charged exchange of views at the punch table.
    • A conversation is a living exchange, it's when people say things back and forth and no one knows for certain what's going to be said.
    • How close relations are between the MfS general and the prosecutor becomes evident from a short exchange of words before both left the building.
    • Needless to say, this didn't go over very well, and heated exchanges were the result of these meetings.
    • In fact, she joined in on their short exchange of words as she felt a bigger feeling take over her.
    • Still, the latest meeting was a good contest, not short of lively exchanges, memorable clashes and the occasional burst of blatant hostility.
    • Recently there has been an exchange carried on within the pages of Swim Magazine that has intrigued us.
    • In this private exchange I think the insults got even more vicious.
    • The visit instigated several poetic exchanges between Dunbar and Cotter.
    • MANY THINK that Corporation council meetings always witness heated exchanges, since it deals with only ‘serious’ issues.
    • A heated exchange of words broke out with a group of eight youths who were standing on the other side of the road.
    • The extract concluded with an exchange about whether their conversation was being recorded.
    • To challenge either is to perpetuate an irresolvable debate, a heated exchange of ideas that no one ever wins, which leaves everyone with bad feelings.
    • During one of the debate's most heated exchanges, Copps and Manley unsuccessfully tried to pin down Martin on the issue of campaign finance reform.
    • The incident led to some heated exchanges and a match that was always disputed with total commitment and undisguised physicality threatened to boil over on occasions.
    Synonyms
    conversation, dialogue, chat, talk, word, discussion, meeting, conference
    debate, argument, altercation, war of words
    British informal confab, row, barney, slanging match
    formal confabulation
    rare colloquy
  • 4

    short for telephone exchange
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Oftel did say the other week that it was finally acting to speed up access to the most attractive exchanges, but to little effect.
    • It hopes WiMAX will allow it to offer broadband connections to rural customers too far from ADSL-supporting digital exchanges and cable TV networks.
    • Motorola developed the first cellphone system more than 20 years ago, along with the exchanges that connect standard cellphones to the public telephone network.
    • Each connection on the network acts as a mini exchange, sending and receiving information not only for its own requirements, but also forwarding data for other connections.
    • According to BT, this means that all but 0.2 per cent of homes and businesses connected to an ADSL exchange should be able to get broadband.
    • Telecoms operators can have unescorted access to BT's exchanges telecoms watchdog, Oftel, confirmed today.
    • In September KPNQwest announced it would install its equipment in BT local exchanges to offer broadband DSL services in the UK.
    • provide reliable transmission media to all the exchanges by the year 2002; and
    • But it isn't practical to use fiber optics for the connection between your telephone or computer and your telecom exchange.
    • The company's wholesale division dragged its heels on equipping local exchanges for ADSL, understandably, while it figured out a way of making it pay.
    • Some exchanges within the 062 area code will require that customers first dial the area code followed by the telephone number, according to Telecom.
    • If enough people in each area are prepared to subscribe to ADSL - then BT will go-ahead and upgrade exchanges for broadband.
    • While he says some organizations do this to some degree - such as call centers monitoring phone exchanges - few companies do it consistently.
    • More than £9 million is being pumped into the North East of England to wire up all the exchanges for broadband.
    • The government is going to bundle together the public procurement of £500m in broadband services to stimulate the installation of ADSL and other equipment at exchanges.
    • He's just heard from BT that Edenbridge would need at least 400 people to sign up for broadband before the telco will DSL-enable the exchange.
    • Only two years after they successfully fought off plans for three transmitters, the residents are now gearing up for a battle with two telecoms companies over the exchange in Lower Prospect.
    • The calls are received at the illegal exchange in India using gadgets such as multiplexers and dialers and sent to mobile phones.
    • Separately, BT also announced that it is extending the reach of its ADSL service so that properties with around 6km of line to the exchange can now get broadband.
    • Furthermore, the cost of enabling a substation to broadband is much less than bringing DSL to an exchange.
  • 5Chess
    A move or short sequence of moves in which both players capture material of comparable value, or particularly the exchange in which one captures a rook in return for a knight or bishop.

    〔棋〕换子,兑子

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Also, I once had a student give an expert a draw when he was up the exchange in the endgame.
    • Black's opening play was rather dubious and Karpov has won the exchange.
    • The opening was a messy affair, but I imagine Piket was doing alright until he blundered an exchange in the early middlegame.
    • After the exchange of rooks on the 20th move, the star player from Indian Airlines tried to gain control on white's kingside only to further weaken the b2 square.
    • Of course, if both sides stick their Rooks on that file, it might just lead to mass exchanges with no gain for either player.
    • After a series of exchanges, he was left with 2 rooks and 6 pawns versus a rook, 2 knights and 5 pawns for Polgar.
    • Karpov sought the rook exchange and Kamsky avoided it, ultimately winning.
    • After several exchanges, Gallagher was down 2 pawns in the rook + pawn ending, as he couldn't defend everything.
    • Even exchanges are fine, as are sacrifices with a clear goal in mind.
    • We have been playing that the player could refuse the exchange!
    • White's a bit tied up so Buckley anticipates Ba3 and prepares in the event of a Bishop exchange to bring his Rook into the action on c5 or a5.
    • Kasparov was up the exchange, but his king was out in the open across the board and Adams had an extra pawn.
    • After several exchanges, Bareev was left with a knight and 5 pawns to Junior's knight and 6 pawns, including a passed b-pawn.
    • It is less good to play this move after a preliminary exchange of knights on e4.
    • White was sorely tempted by the smothering move 1.Nf7 + winning the exchange, and played it.
    • Black sacrificed the exchange in the early middlegame, but this brought no joy.
    • So, it turned out that White had to acquiesce to the exchange of Bishop for Knight after all!
verb ɪksˈtʃeɪndʒɛksˈtʃeɪndʒɪksˈtʃeɪndʒ
[with object]
  • 1Give something and receive something of the same kind in return.

    交换;互换

    we exchanged addresses

    我们互换了地址。

    he exchanged a concerned glance with Stephen

    他和斯蒂温互相关心地看了一眼。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And thank you also to all the other men who entered the ring to exchange blows with me.
    • How many issues for discussion drop off the agenda until the rings have been safely exchanged?
    • Dean Allan later told police the conversation got him wound up, and when his wife returned they exchanged words.
    • No blows were exchanged, but many insults were flung, many tears were shed and many shoulders were cried on.
    • They seemed keen to keep in touch once they returned to India so we exchanged e-mail addresses.
    • They exchanged mailing addresses and became good friends after their chance meeting.
    • Rather, I order that the parties exchange income tax returns and notices of assessment by the June 1 each year.
    • The passengers, from Canada, South Africa, Australia and Germany, swap e-mail addresses and promise to exchange Sopranos DVDs and memorabilia.
    • There were blows being exchanged between the protesters and the police and so on.
    • Spouses were not picked off the shelf rather the event served as a rendezvous for parents to exchange addresses for ‘further discussions’.
    • It's not unusual, says one member of the team, to see passengers exchanging e-mail addresses at the end of a trip, probably the result of hours spent dining together.
    • Roads prone to gridlocks and bumper-to-bumper traffic have both the traffic cop and the commuter blowing horns and exchanging a colourful repartee.
    • In this way, people can exchange e-mail addresses, names and phone numbers while shaking hands, with the data automatically written into both their PDAs, the paper said.
    • If I have any problems, I can return or exchange it at any other store location, and it comes with a free roll of film.
    • Kaimo and his cohorts are now exchanging legal blows with mobile-phone giants, including Globe Telecom and Smart Communications.
    • Amateur radio enthusiasts around the globe were running into problems trying to exchange e-mail addresses due to the lack of a Morse character for the @ symbol.
    • I've already received a few cards from Bloggers that have exchanged snail mail addresses with me.
    • We exchanged email addresses, and I regularly receive correspondence from the boy and his family.
    • After exchanging the One Ring early in Return, the duo wind up in each other's arms on the slopes of scenic Mount Doom.
    • On Sunday enjoy a farewell breakfast with your new friends, it will give you a chance to exchange names and addresses with your fellow guests.
    Synonyms
    trade, swap, switch, barter, change, interchange
    reciprocate
    archaic truck
    1. 1.1 Give or receive one thing in place of another.
      调换
      we regret that tickets cannot be exchanged

      很遗憾票不能调换。

      I exchanged my overalls for a sober dark suit
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Economic exchange via the market is thus a positive-sum game: everybody gains more than they put in because of increased efficiency.
      • Newcomers could also exchange a ticket stub for a free karate lesson.
      • Every time somebody visits your opinion, you earn dooyoo miles, which can be exchanged for vouchers or cash.
      • Farm wives would use butter as cash, exchanging their home-churned product for merchandise at the general store.
      • It chooses a January year-end, at which point a large mountain of Christmas cards has just been exchanged for cash.
      • Let's be honest, business is about exchanging goods for cash; no genuine business would deliberately omit a mention of its products and a description of its operations.
      • If he accepts he will be exchanging the immediate risk of serving in the territories for the far greater danger of riding a tank into battle.
      • The catch is that these Asian export giants like Japan and China can't afford to just liquidate their dollar-holdings and exchange them for euros.
      • About 100 dealers in the centre, the report said, were willing to exchange cash on the spot or transfer it to Macau.
      • Phones will be exchanged for cash or vouchers through the Community Foneback scheme.
      • These tickets are then exchanged for prizes at predictably confiscatory rates.
      • We've already tapped a long-term credit line with our bank, and I don't want to exchange equity for cash.
      • A receipt given by the eSeva clerk becomes the valid ticket for the movie with the purchaser not having to exchange it for a ticket at the cinema hall before the show.
      • They won't want to exchange large wads of cash at the bank and raise suspicions of money laundering.
      • The store isn't just a place to exchange cash for computers… it's a place to create a genuine emotional branding experience, one that lasts.
      • According to the company's norms the ticket is non-transferable nor can it be exchanged for cash.
      • A trained shop assistant shows the correct and perfectly acceptable way to exchange money at the till
      • The vouchers are sent to the group who can either use them in store or exchange them for cash.
      • This leaves people with the choice of either getting whiplash from being forced to sit in the very front row, or to exchange their ticket for a Silvercity gift certificate.
      • Season tickets are exchanged for small stubs of paper, with window seats available in corporate boxes.
    2. 1.2no object Exchange contracts.
      互换合同
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In contracts where the declarer uses the stock, the declarer is allowed after exchanging to surrender the contract without play, accepting a simple loss.

Phrases

  • exchange contracts

    互换合同

    • (of a buyer) sign a legal contract with the vendor of a property or piece of land, making the purchase legally binding and enforceable.

      〈英〉互换合同指买方与财产或土地的卖方签订合同以使交易在法律上生效

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Time to think again, and the Association of British Insurers is now advising prospective house buyers to look into the risk of flooding before they exchange contracts.
      • We are prepared to give you 48 hours notice should, for any reason, we be instructed to exchange contracts for a lesser sum.
      • If the survey was successful you will need to agree when to sign and exchange contracts.
      • They then purported to exchange contracts with the winner of that race on behalf of both claimant and defendant.
      • This period of uncertainty will last until the solicitors have formally exchanged contracts, at which point everything is cast in stone.
      • In this chapter, we will look at what Barbara (or, more likely, her professional adviser) will have to do, either before or after exchanging contracts, to ensure that it is safe for her to buy the property.
      • It fell through because our buyers pulled out just when we were ready to exchange contracts.
      • Hence, the elongating timeframes; on average it took 32 weeks for a seller to conclude a sale; 10 weeks from when a buyer submitted an offer to exchanging contracts.
      • As a result of not sorting out this crucial aspect earlier on, the deadline for exchanging contracts was put back so many times that the vendor got nervous and almost pulled out.
      • The letter was sent by me and my involvement was limited to dealing with the formalities required to exchange contracts.
      • We will then be in a position to instruct our solicitors to exchange contracts on the lease by mid-January.
      • It is not like selling land or exchanging contracts and postponed dates of settlement or anything…
      • On the Friday before last weekend, bank officials set about trying to identify the counterparties to the foreign exchange contracts.
      • Can the Council get on with exchanging contracts for the rebuilding of Sweetland Court in accordance with its plans or must it await further approvals from the health professional and the solicitor
      • Life Property has exchanged contracts to purchase a 0.78-acre site, which is to be developed for a 126-cover Pizza Hut restaurant.
      • The developers and contractors are due to exchange contracts this week and the first big task will be the building of access roads for contractors, followed by a massive restructuring of junction 21 of the M62.
      • However, the council has already exchanged contracts to sell the land at Vicarage Lane and Garrowby Road and is also considering plans from Persimmon Homes to build 22 detached homes
      • Could you let me have an answer ASAP as this may be a deal breaker as far as the client is concerned and we are due to exchange contracts by Friday.
      • I got within two days of exchanging contracts and then the buyer pulled out - as a direct result of Arc Light.
      • ‘We were about to sign and exchange contracts when the site was put up for sale,’ he said.
  • in exchange

    • As a thing exchanged.

      作为交换

      he carried bags of groceries in exchange for a nickel
      Example sentencesExamples
      • For those families with larger families they should be able to phone for a larger bin in exchange for their existing one.
      • The emperor gave the two men a bag of gold coins in exchange for their promise to begin working on the fabric immediately.
      • You might be prepared to take a lower salary in exchange for that kind of security about your future.
      • If a new law is passed permitting sex in exchange for money to legally take place I believe many more people would stay safe.
      • And besides, they have been providing entertainment in exchange for a tin of dog food per day.
      • I remember it clearly - Jason asking someone to sponsor his site in exchange for an iBook.
      • Olivier has agreed to help him improve his French in exchange for help in English.
      • Israel would have received in exchange an equivalent geographic area on the West Bank.
      • The money offered in exchange for such abuse is too tempting for many of them.
      • Several then offered me bits of dried fish or hard-boiled eggs in exchange.
      • He said the men took him to a forest and threatened to kill him but he convinced them to let him go in exchange for the car.
      • Thus, it was of no surprise that they demanded nothing in exchange for freeing the twelve men.
      • Restaurants try to trick you out of a little more money in exchange for a lot more food.
      • He said the boy often cleaned planes in exchange for flight time and was very familiar with operations at the school.
      • At first we asked him to tell us the truth and then in exchange we'd ask the court to soften his punishment.
      • These contracts offer companies lower tariffs in exchange for the right to shut off their power in times of need.
      • Many of these make false promises about solutions they can provide in exchange for hefty fees that they charge.
      • A school is set to give up some of its land for a housing development in exchange for a new sports field, it has been revealed.
      • If anyone needs a Gmail account, I have half a dozen to give away in exchange for a donation to the charity of your choice.
      • Liz is just joining a long line of celebrities who are happy to endorse unlikely products in exchange for the right fee.

Derivatives

  • exchangeability

  • noun ɛkstʃeɪndʒəˈbɪlɪtiɪkstʃeɪndʒəˈbɪlɪtiɪksˌtʃeɪndʒəˈbɪlədi
    • Both authors are committed to the idea of accounting for business activity using exit values, and advocate the basic accounting principles of exchangeability for assets and future cash outflow for liabilities.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Ideally, each set should be a complete set, a randomly chosen subset, or, at the very least, an arbitrary subset based on some factor (typically, experimental convenience) extraneous to the issues raised by exchangeability.
      • Yellowhammer, attempting to prevent Moll from escaping to meet the man she loves, equates her in value and exchangeability to the bullion or coins in his shop: ‘I will lock up this baggage, / As carefully as my gold ’.
      • It is categorically mistaken to wish, as Bloom does, for limitless exchangeability in the sphere of familial relations, just as it is categorically mistaken to wish for absolute difference or singularity in the sphere of civic finance.
      • Vision acquires a previously unknown flexibility and autonomy: ‘what occurs is a new valuation of visual experience: it is given an unprecedented mobility and exchangeability, abstracted from any founding site or referent’.
      • The latter was in contrast to the definition proposed ten years earlier which specified exchangeability as an essential asset characteristic.
      • If, additionally, a study employs random assignment, then exchangeability derives from the randomization performed, and the randomization test supports internal validity as well as statistical validity.
      • Adorno argues that the belief that true thinking may simply be equated with correct predicative thinking both reflects and enables the imperative to a universal exchangeability of objects within organised economic life.
      • For the body that stands for exchangeability and use is female.
      • The cinematic image is freed from its traditional image character through the exchangeability and simulation of its signifiers.
      • It does not require exchangeability of that which is called an asset; therefore it allows all expenditures to be considered for inclusion as assets.
      • The members of Crass also attempted to mediate between the two poles of the commodity - use-value and exchange-value - by de-emphasizing their commodities' exchangeability expressed as a price.
      • Such essentialism turns profane spaces into sites that are released from any constraint as to their exchangeability and exploitation.
      • The elegant exchangeability of the ASG comes with a cost: it lends itself only to very computationally intensive techniques.
      • The photograph, the performance, and the statue, in turn, point directly toward that ideal exchangeability.
      • Attempts to classify amino acid changes according to their evolutionary exchangeability have been briefly noted.
      • Another feature is that a given amino acid can belong to several distinct classes, indicating that context-dependent amino-acid exchangeability is an important aspect of protein evolution.
      • He advocates criteria such as exchangeability for assets and future cash outflows for liabilities.
      • The facility with which extensions to the coalescent can be made depends on this problem of exchangeability.
      • It does not require exchangeability, and therefore it allows all expenditures to be considered for inclusion as assets.
  • exchangeable

  • adjective ɪksˈtʃeɪndʒəb(ə)lɛksˈtʃeɪndʒəb(ə)l
    • It is telling that this frozen instant is capable of being released in time as a movie, for which it serves as virtual seed, even as the movie, as actualization of that seed, is virtually exchangeable with that seed.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The original negative or positive is not generally exchangeable, but preserves the photograph's truth-value as an image of an object.
      • Another change is in the investment Liberty will make in United Pan-Europe Communications - Liberty will now make that investment in the form of a convertible loan that is exchangeable into shares of UPC.
      • Mr Sullivan believes the most likely option will be to refinance the existing €170m preference shares through either another convertible, exchangeable or private placement to lengthen the groups debt maturity profile.
      • Other freely exchangeable currencies should first be converted into US currency before being transferred.
      • Through a trust, it is also selling 23.4 million shares of an exchangeable security that is convertible into Cablevision common stock in three years.
      • What Holmes is saying here is that even though property is exchangeable, it doesn't arise from value; it's a creation of law.
      • It rewards workers for their efforts with tokens which are exchangeable for commodities and services.
      • Petroleum is fungible or freely exchangeable, and cannot be ‘controlled.’
      • Private property is in essence a cluster of rights inuring to the benefit of the owner, freely exchangeable in accordance with the terms of private agreements, and recognized and protected by common consent.
      • According to our scientific calculations each rose contains approximately 16-22 petals, each of which is exchangeable for a luscious shooter, in our case golden tequila sunrise.
      • Also, remove and replace the exchangeable panels (window and screen) to make sure they fit properly and with a weather tight seal.
      • We used an exchangeable correlation structure to adjust for the correlation between repeated measurements.
      • ‘As its debt payment to IBRA, it will issue exchangeable bonds, which start to mature in their eighth, ninth, tenth and eleventh years,’ Sjahrial said on Tuesday.
      • A free market requires well-defined, freely exchangeable, and enforceable private property rights.
      • It even has its own currency, Disney dollars, exchangeable one-for-one with US dollars - and, with the exchange rate as strong as it currently is, this is far from Mickey Mouse money.
      • If this seems recommended, it is these reinforcers which might be exchangeable for tokens, which are delivered contingent on more desirable behavior.
      • Through the logic of the market, the particular products of human labor become exchangeable commodities, made universally equivalent through money.
      • Are all Internet portals similar and exchangeable?
      • They themselves become exchangeable representatives of that a priori value.
  • exchanger

    互换合同

  • noun ɪkˈstʃeɪndʒəɛkˈstʃeɪndʒəɪksˈtʃeɪndʒər
    • High-volume syringe exchangers may be the most frequent injectors, resulting in more medical complications; however, no health-specific data were available for NEP participants, thus this hypothesis could not be tested.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In general, plate heat exchangers take up less space than other types of heat-transfer systems like tubular exchangers and can be more easily alternated in plate number, location or flow depending on process requirements.
      • Swap cars, too, as many home - exchangers do, and a holiday can cost less than a quarter of the price of the same trip with a rented property and vehicle.
      • If enough magma congealed around the exchangers it could degrade performance and cause damage.
      • ‘If we couldn't go at the last minute, our backup plan is to move in with my mother and allow the exchangers to stay in the house anyway, ‘says Cheryl.’
      • For the subset of participants who provided data at all three time points, rates of syringe sharing, syringe reuse, and indirect sharing decreased over time for both exchangers and nonexchangers.
      • Air-to-air exchangers will dehumidify and provide a constant 0.75 air change per hour, compared with the average four to five air changes per hour that leak into the average wood frame home.
      • I saw a TV news report today on New Jersey's needle exchange programs. needle exchangers have been arrested and convicted in New Jersey in the past, despite the fact that the exchanges probably prevent the spread of AIDS and other diseases.
      • Once prosperous merchants, bankers, moneylenders and currency exchangers, they were uprooted from their homes and occupations in the early 90s as ruling Muslims reacted to the Hindu attack on the Babri Masjid in north India.
      • Although more than 80% of the women in each group indicated that having a steady partner is important, 58.5% of the exchangers and 36.5% of the nonexchangers reported being single.
      • To study the joint kinematics, we used a radiographic laboratory equipped with two ceiling-mounted radiographic tubes and two film exchangers designed for repeated and simultaneous exposures.
      • The results present a framework for structure-function relationships of cation / Ca 2 + exchangers, suggesting unique signature motifs of conserved residues that may underlie divergent functional properties.
      • Although some local businesses already accept cash payments in yuan for goods purchased by visiting Chinese, they exchange the yuan back to Hong Kong dollars through unofficial channels, such as private money exchangers.
      • So, although it may be easier for you to go through the euro-airport without bothering a money exchanger, macroeconomic management remains as complex as ever.
      • Enhancements have been made for different types of heat exchangers - including plate heat exchangers, tubular heat and scraped-surface exchangers - as well as for gasketed and welded units.
      • Quite often, the exchangers add as if by negligence one more digit in the ‘buy’ rate for the euro and instead of 1.954 they put it as 1.195.
      • Passive humidifiers or heat-moisture exchangers decrease ventilator circuit colonization but have not significantly reduced the incidence of VAP.
      • At best, by entering into secondary exchange relations with others who are regular SEP participants, the secondary exchangers are associating with a group of users who are likely to be more educated in harm reduction practices.
      • Three general routes of syringe distribution were identified between primary and secondary exchangers: between close friends and lovers; for people who lived in close proximity to them; and with customers who bought drugs from them.
      • Four STMP servers running Postfix are used: two of them are mail exchangers for the HEC Montréal domains and the other two serve internal mailing needs.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French eschange (noun), eschangier (verb), based on changer (see change). The spelling was influenced by Latin ex- 'out, utterly' (see ex-1).

  • change from Middle English:

    Change comes via Old French from Latin cambire, ‘to exchange or barter’, found also in exchange (Late Middle English). The ultimate origin could be Celtic, which would mean that the Romans picked up the word when they invaded the lands of the ancient Gauls and Britons. See also chop, ring

Rhymes

arrange, change, counterchange, estrange, grange, interchange, Lagrange, mange, part-exchange, range, short-change, strange

Definition of exchange in US English:

exchange

nouniksˈCHānjɪksˈtʃeɪndʒ
  • 1An act of giving one thing and receiving another (especially of the same type or value) in return.

    交换;互换;调换

    negotiations should eventually lead to an exchange of land for peace

    谈判的最终结果应该是以土地换和平。

    an exchange of prisoners of war

    交换战俘。

    opportunities for the exchange of information

    交换信息的良机。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • When he returned North, following an exchange of prisoners, he was given a series of ovations and testimonials and had dinner with Abraham Lincoln, with whom he became friendly.
    • Its aim is to develop standards for almost everything, to facilitate the international exchange of goods and services, and foster scientific research.
    • The act is aimed at preventing the movement of terrorist funds, and enhancing the exchange of information about financial transactions with foreign countries.
    • When a prisoner exchange provided him with a chance to return to his native Groton, his relatives had to come to take him by force back to his birthplace.
    • After calling the store and assuring the person that she did indeed know how to match the coloured wire to the same coloured connection on the system, they instructed her to return it for an exchange.
    • Costumes and accessories are not refundable and can only be returned for an exchange.
    • In exchange, Kansas will receive approximately 17% of tribal casino revenue.
    • The second floor, which is accessed via a freight elevator, provides a needle exchange service that operates four day per week, four to six hours/day.
    • We do not have to run millions of experiments to see that people value the good received in an exchange over the good given away.
    • U.N. correspondents were at Panmunjom covering Operation Little Switch, a prisoner exchange.
    • During negotiations over a prisoner exchange, English officials handed over this list to the French intermediary, Rigaud de Vaudreuil.
    • Should the Cubs find a taker who can sign Sammy long-term at any point in the season, be it February, May or July, they should still receive a reasonable exchange.
    • The government and rebels remain far apart on conditions for a prisoner exchange.
    • There remains much that needs to be done in order to make the Internet a widely acceptable marketplace for the exchange of goods and services between merchants and consumers.
    • In exchange, New York received pitcher Pedro Ramos.
    • The lower capital gains rates apply to sales or exchanges received after May 5, 2003.
    • In exchange, each student received a candy bar and a pencil.
    • The agreement establishes commissions to delineate the disputed border and provides for the exchange of prisoners and the return of displaced people.
    • No returns or exchanges unless the item is faulty or not as described.
    • In exchange, the taxpayers receive $10 million in annual rent, which will never come close to reimbursing the city and state for their costs.
    Synonyms
    interchange, trade, trading, trade-off, swapping, barter, giving and taking, traffic, trafficking, bandying, reciprocity
    1. 1.1 A visit or visits in which two people or groups from different countries stay with each other or do each other's jobs.
      (不同国家间两个学者或两个学术团体之间的)交流访问
      as modifier nine colleagues were away on an exchange visit to Germany

      九个同事去了德国进行交流访问。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • They flew from Manchester Airport on April 11 after education officials were told there was no need to cancel the cultural exchange visit.
      • The first leg of the exchange involved a week-long visit to Lisbon of various Belfast artists involved in the project to take the art of Belfast to the Portugese capital.
      • Defending solicitor Victor Clarke stated that Mr Ploet was in Ireland five months as part of a farming exchange and intended to return to France next week.
      • Despite the serious nature of the expertise shared by the lifesavers, Moreton College's Rob Kreisler said the exchange visit was also a chance to build friendships across the Atlantic.
      • The culmination of the exchange was a visit by the Foxford Transition Years to Ratingen in March and a return visit to Foxford by the German students and teachers last week.
      • The culmination of the exchange was a visit to Foxford by the German students and teachers recently.
      • Meanwhile Hamburg and St. Petersburg were, for the first time, able to arrange personal visits and school exchanges.
      • This requires intensifying the dialogue between them by multiplying the exchange of visits focused on the political and economic activity fields.
      • is a common statement heard among those who have recently returned from an exchange, only to realise that others are barely interested in hearing about their adventures.
      • He admitted some people had questioned the value of the Caribbean trip and suggested an exchange visit to Pakistan or India would be more relevant.
      • The latest exchange visit was hailed as a great success by Mr Shaw and he is making fresh appeals for people to get involved in creating even closer links between York and Munster.
      • Emmanuel said a St Lucian team will be preparing for an exchange visit from St Vincent, in mid-December, to engage in a variety of sporting disciplines.
      • The group, which consists of 5 teachers and 26 school children are on an exchange visit with Moylough Primary School.
      • Ms Morrison-Tohol and Ms Wennmacher were in Castlebar accompanying a group from the Hochstadt Kolping Familie on an exchange visit with the local Scouts.
      • The target's dependent is in a student exchange program-BECOME THAT EXCHANGE STUDENT
      • A Ugandan teacher on an exchange visit to Ingleton Middle School is keeping warm in the cold Northern climes by teaching pupils how to play African drums.
      • Highlights included visiting America in an exchange programme, a parachute jump and qualifying to fly solo.
      • It was the fourth time there has been an exchange visit for students of both towns.
      • A delegation from Chippenham visited Uganda in February last year and this was meant to be the exchange visit for the Ugandans.
      • Plans are also underway for an exchange visit from members of an orchestra in Prague in April.
    2. 1.2 A short conversation; an argument.
      交谈;争论
      there was a heated exchange

      当时发生了激烈的争论。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Still, the latest meeting was a good contest, not short of lively exchanges, memorable clashes and the occasional burst of blatant hostility.
      • In this private exchange I think the insults got even more vicious.
      • To challenge either is to perpetuate an irresolvable debate, a heated exchange of ideas that no one ever wins, which leaves everyone with bad feelings.
      • The visit instigated several poetic exchanges between Dunbar and Cotter.
      • MANY THINK that Corporation council meetings always witness heated exchanges, since it deals with only ‘serious’ issues.
      • A conversation is a living exchange, it's when people say things back and forth and no one knows for certain what's going to be said.
      • Then after the brief exchange, the two office workers go their own ways, never to meet again.
      • I am distracted from further conversation by an expanding exchange on MSN Messenger.
      • There were heated exchanges at the meeting, with Mr Martin making an impassioned speech defending his position.
      • In fact, she joined in on their short exchange of words as she felt a bigger feeling take over her.
      • A heated exchange of words broke out with a group of eight youths who were standing on the other side of the road.
      • The incident led to some heated exchanges and a match that was always disputed with total commitment and undisguised physicality threatened to boil over on occasions.
      • Recently there has been an exchange carried on within the pages of Swim Magazine that has intrigued us.
      • Needless to say, this didn't go over very well, and heated exchanges were the result of these meetings.
      • During one of the debate's most heated exchanges, Copps and Manley unsuccessfully tried to pin down Martin on the issue of campaign finance reform.
      • How close relations are between the MfS general and the prosecutor becomes evident from a short exchange of words before both left the building.
      • The extract concluded with an exchange about whether their conversation was being recorded.
      • What began as a heated exchange of words soon became full-blown fisticuffs.
      • In Right Appetite, they developed a movement conversation with rapid exchanges, flirtatious teasing, even telling silences.
      • No closing ranks, no calling ‘skank’, not even a charged exchange of views at the punch table.
      Synonyms
      conversation, dialogue, chat, talk, word, discussion, meeting, conference
    3. 1.3 The giving of money for its equivalent in the money of another country.
      汇兑;兑换
      Example sentencesExamples
      • It is believed that the trend may help to realize the free exchange of currency, preparing the ground for the Renminbi to be an international currency.
      • Beneficial receipt may also arise from currency exchange.
      • Sure, they benefited from favorable currency exchange, but what's going on here?
      • Another fact is that currency exchange is a profitable business because there is demand.
      • The report urged they must hedge against currency exchange risks to protect themselves from the fluctuation of the greenback.
      • However, some shops may ask you to pay in sterling and may apply currency exchange and commission rates which are unfavourable.
      • The benefits include only one currency exchange, transparency of prices via a united shopping market and no risk of fluctuations between countries.
      • On the positive front, if sterling remains at current levels, the negative currency exchange impact that has hit earnings from Britain this year should have worked its way through by next year.
      • The cost of currency exchange has also pushed prices higher.
      • There was a negative currency exchange adjustment totalling €84 million in the last half-year.
      • Most of its business was in currency exchange and retail banking and its paid-up capital was only one million pounds sterling, one third that of HSBC.
      • This action would eliminate currency exchange risks and risks attached to purchasing goods from an economy with a hugely inflated currency.
      • Rates of exchange should be based on this one currency, which can be used for payment of all international trade.
      • They never knew about the two-room flats and sleeping rooms he rented, the weekly money orders sent home, the currency exchange.
      • Revenue has grown only 1.4% annually over the past five years, depressed partly by currency exchange fluctuations.
      • Currenex, a new business-to-business independent foreign currency exchange, expects to sign its first major client in Ireland in the coming weeks.
      • The daily trade in currency exchange alone is more than 50 times the value of world trade in goods and services.
      • Consistent with the shift toward a new government in Iraq run by the Iraqi people, coalition forces are playing only a minor role in the currency exchange program.
      • Finance is often thought of as the sphere of global flows and so it is in terms of currency exchange or direct investment.
      • Chinese tourism in Taiwan has been allowed under limited conditions in the past, but Chinese currency exchange has never been offered before at local banks.
    4. 1.4 The fee or percentage charged for converting the currency of one country into that of another.
    5. 1.5 A system or market in which commercial transactions involving currency, shares, commodities, etc., can be carried out within or between countries.
      交易系统;交易所。参见FOREIGN EXCHANGE
      See also foreign exchange
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The exchange of currencies involves transaction costs.
      • In this manner, thriving nations could come to North and South Korea through cultural, athletic, political, economic and commercial exchanges.
      • Conventional share trading on exchanges is, in many respects, yesterday's way of doing business.
      • Economic exchanges within Vietnam and abroad are in full flow, and Hoa Hao followers are deeply engaged in marketing activities.
      • The portal will provide property listings, information and data research, and in the long term will be a transaction exchange for the industry.
      • On economic issues, the two parties agreed to cooperate toward pursuing the realization of direct shipping links, agricultural exchanges and a common market across the strait.
      • You can browse among the hundreds of foreign companies that list their shares on U.S. exchanges using American depositary receipts.
      • The small and midsize companies that mostly list on the exchanges have very few shares outstanding.
      • The dollar's slide on the currency exchanges has led economists to predict the pound sterling will soon be worth two dollars, which all adds up to massive discounts for British shoppers in the US.
      • London's Alternative Investment Market, supposedly the dogsbody of share exchanges, is enjoying a social whirl, while the ugly sister of the main market sits out the dance.
      • Geography acts in a similar manner, because the costs of overcoming space in order to carry out market exchanges incur transport-transactions costs.
      • ‘Taiwan and Japan have shared increasingly close economic exchanges,’ Chen told his guest at the presidential office.
      • Stable trade should be carried out through exchanges among business enterprises and agricultural organizations.
      • The concept requires some knowledge of markets and exchanges, so traders are seen as the core member base.
      • Ever since, the seat has lost almost half its value as the exchange's market share and profits have come under pressure.
      • Advocates of more minimal government might argue that people have every right to such food as they can obtain through fair market exchanges and gifts.
      • Commercial exchange, conducted at urban markets, was subject to elaborate customs and taxation.
      • Shire has little surplus cash in its balance sheet, so a paper-based reverse takeover via a share exchange would be the most probable route to a takeover.
      • The fact that the new distribution arose from market transactions is irrelevant, since no one had any right to transfer those resources through market exchanges.
      • The play, though it is chronologically out of place, presents further elaborations on the figuring of identity, and metaphors of market and commercial exchange.
    6. 1.6 A central office or station of operations providing telephone service.
      private branch exchanges to automate internal telephone networks
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The wiring in our house is connected to a local exchange carrier's central office via a twisted pair.
      • With LNP, the subscriber's telephone number identifies only the subscriber and not the exchange hosting that number.
      • In the days of operator-assisted calls, this meant you would call an operator who connected your call to an operator working in the exchange that serviced your party.
      • Of course, nobody thinks cable operators are going to quickly unseat the RBOCs as the leading providers of local exchange services.
      • The exchanges allow firms within a three-mile radius to use a system which is up to ten times faster than an ordinary telephone line.
      • The idea is that people who currently live too far from an exchange to get ADSL services will be able to get a slightly hobbled * version.
      • In many cases, the exchange itself will take place over a Gigabit Ethernet switch operated by the exchange and will involve no circuit elements.
      • DSL for home use can function in the same way, with contention appearing at the exchange / central office.
      • Is there a cure as the internal telephone cable from exchange to condo is about 750 meters?
      • Volkswagen, for instance, operates a private exchange supplied by i2 Technologies, Ariba, and IBM.
      • To avail of the service, customers must have a standard fixed telephone line, exchange coverage, and computer equipment that reaches the minimum required specification.
      • In the old days (pre-iSCSI) the two most common choices were to take the machine down or have a SAN service your exchange needs.
      • Method of establishing a connection as well as an exchange, service computer and communications network
      • An innovative part of the project is an SMS text messaging service and an international exchange with a similar group in England.
      • Wright also sketched plans for a separate commission, a post office and telegraph exchange intended for central Baghdad.
      • According to official sources, the blast ripped apart the exchange yesterday cutting the telephone line of the entire area.
    7. 1.7Chess A move or short sequence of moves in which both players capture material of comparable value, or particularly the exchange in which one captures a rook in return for a knight or bishop (and is said to win the exchange).
      〔棋〕换子,兑子
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The opening was a messy affair, but I imagine Piket was doing alright until he blundered an exchange in the early middlegame.
      • Kasparov was up the exchange, but his king was out in the open across the board and Adams had an extra pawn.
      • Also, I once had a student give an expert a draw when he was up the exchange in the endgame.
      • White was sorely tempted by the smothering move 1.Nf7 + winning the exchange, and played it.
      • After a series of exchanges, he was left with 2 rooks and 6 pawns versus a rook, 2 knights and 5 pawns for Polgar.
      • It is less good to play this move after a preliminary exchange of knights on e4.
      • After the exchange of rooks on the 20th move, the star player from Indian Airlines tried to gain control on white's kingside only to further weaken the b2 square.
      • We have been playing that the player could refuse the exchange!
      • So, it turned out that White had to acquiesce to the exchange of Bishop for Knight after all!
      • After several exchanges, Gallagher was down 2 pawns in the rook + pawn ending, as he couldn't defend everything.
      • Even exchanges are fine, as are sacrifices with a clear goal in mind.
      • Karpov sought the rook exchange and Kamsky avoided it, ultimately winning.
      • Of course, if both sides stick their Rooks on that file, it might just lead to mass exchanges with no gain for either player.
      • White's a bit tied up so Buckley anticipates Ba3 and prepares in the event of a Bishop exchange to bring his Rook into the action on c5 or a5.
      • Black's opening play was rather dubious and Karpov has won the exchange.
      • After several exchanges, Bareev was left with a knight and 5 pawns to Junior's knight and 6 pawns, including a passed b-pawn.
      • Black sacrificed the exchange in the early middlegame, but this brought no joy.
    8. 1.8 A building or institution used for the trading of a particular commodity or commodities.
      商品交易所
      the New York Stock Exchange
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Finally, the CFTC exists primarily to protect commodities investors and the exchanges, areas where Enron was not particularly active.
      • PROS AND CONS But regulators, exchanges, and institutions should be wary of unintended consequences.
      • The five New York commodity futures exchanges will reopen today, a spokesman said yesterday.
      • That means two commodity exchanges, on one floor.
      • These are readily available free from several of the commodity exchanges.
      • In recent years, Hong Kong has lost market share to exchanges in London and New York, where spreads are narrower, on stocks that are listed on more than one exchange.
      • Traders on commodity exchanges are warning that a cold winter in the northern hemisphere could see prices, already up 38% since the start of the year, rise a lot further.
      • As the braying traders on the commodity exchanges in London and New York sold Rwanda's coffee and tin they were sealing the fate of peasants 6,000 miles away.
      • Neither the exchanges nor brokerage houses have taken up Levitt's challenge.
      • In particular circumstances the rules of an exchange or clearing house may be expressly incorporated into customers' contracts with members.
      • According to experts of the economic ministry, it has not been decided yet whether the grain is to be sold on commodity exchanges.
      • All exchanges and financial institutions had back-up power systems that allowed them to conduct business as usual.
      • Why this material is included while other material unique to, e.g., commodities or exchanges, is referenced out is not clear.
      • Currently, the SCE is one of the three licensed commodity exchanges in the country.
      • The reforms, however, should focus on improving the transparency of the exchange's operations and governance rather than imposing new rules.
      • A hedger locks in a price for a cash commodity by cross-hedging that commodity with a related commodity traded at one of the commodity exchanges.
      • Wyatt was a broker working for Itex, one of the nation's largest barter exchanges.
      • Agricultural commodity exchanges, for instance, are not subjected to the same insider trading legislation as securities.
      • Imagine multiple trading exchanges and other e-commerce vendors that must all collaborate and charge so a single transaction can be completed.
      • Indeed, the committee wants the European Commission to bar exchanges from owning clearing houses.
      Synonyms
      stock exchange, money market, bourse
verbiksˈCHānjɪksˈtʃeɪndʒ
[with object]
  • 1Give something and receive something of the same kind in return.

    交换;互换

    we exchanged addresses

    我们互换了地址。

    he exchanged a concerned glance with Stephen

    他和斯蒂温互相关心地看了一眼。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • How many issues for discussion drop off the agenda until the rings have been safely exchanged?
    • It's not unusual, says one member of the team, to see passengers exchanging e-mail addresses at the end of a trip, probably the result of hours spent dining together.
    • The passengers, from Canada, South Africa, Australia and Germany, swap e-mail addresses and promise to exchange Sopranos DVDs and memorabilia.
    • If I have any problems, I can return or exchange it at any other store location, and it comes with a free roll of film.
    • No blows were exchanged, but many insults were flung, many tears were shed and many shoulders were cried on.
    • They seemed keen to keep in touch once they returned to India so we exchanged e-mail addresses.
    • There were blows being exchanged between the protesters and the police and so on.
    • Rather, I order that the parties exchange income tax returns and notices of assessment by the June 1 each year.
    • And thank you also to all the other men who entered the ring to exchange blows with me.
    • After exchanging the One Ring early in Return, the duo wind up in each other's arms on the slopes of scenic Mount Doom.
    • We exchanged email addresses, and I regularly receive correspondence from the boy and his family.
    • Roads prone to gridlocks and bumper-to-bumper traffic have both the traffic cop and the commuter blowing horns and exchanging a colourful repartee.
    • I've already received a few cards from Bloggers that have exchanged snail mail addresses with me.
    • They exchanged mailing addresses and became good friends after their chance meeting.
    • Kaimo and his cohorts are now exchanging legal blows with mobile-phone giants, including Globe Telecom and Smart Communications.
    • In this way, people can exchange e-mail addresses, names and phone numbers while shaking hands, with the data automatically written into both their PDAs, the paper said.
    • On Sunday enjoy a farewell breakfast with your new friends, it will give you a chance to exchange names and addresses with your fellow guests.
    • Amateur radio enthusiasts around the globe were running into problems trying to exchange e-mail addresses due to the lack of a Morse character for the @ symbol.
    • Spouses were not picked off the shelf rather the event served as a rendezvous for parents to exchange addresses for ‘further discussions’.
    • Dean Allan later told police the conversation got him wound up, and when his wife returned they exchanged words.
    Synonyms
    trade, swap, switch, barter, change, interchange
    1. 1.1 Give or receive one thing in place of another.
      调换
      we regret that tickets cannot be exchanged

      很遗憾票不能调换。

      I exchanged my overalls for a sober dark suit
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Season tickets are exchanged for small stubs of paper, with window seats available in corporate boxes.
      • Let's be honest, business is about exchanging goods for cash; no genuine business would deliberately omit a mention of its products and a description of its operations.
      • Phones will be exchanged for cash or vouchers through the Community Foneback scheme.
      • If he accepts he will be exchanging the immediate risk of serving in the territories for the far greater danger of riding a tank into battle.
      • The vouchers are sent to the group who can either use them in store or exchange them for cash.
      • We've already tapped a long-term credit line with our bank, and I don't want to exchange equity for cash.
      • It chooses a January year-end, at which point a large mountain of Christmas cards has just been exchanged for cash.
      • A receipt given by the eSeva clerk becomes the valid ticket for the movie with the purchaser not having to exchange it for a ticket at the cinema hall before the show.
      • The catch is that these Asian export giants like Japan and China can't afford to just liquidate their dollar-holdings and exchange them for euros.
      • Newcomers could also exchange a ticket stub for a free karate lesson.
      • A trained shop assistant shows the correct and perfectly acceptable way to exchange money at the till
      • Every time somebody visits your opinion, you earn dooyoo miles, which can be exchanged for vouchers or cash.
      • About 100 dealers in the centre, the report said, were willing to exchange cash on the spot or transfer it to Macau.
      • Economic exchange via the market is thus a positive-sum game: everybody gains more than they put in because of increased efficiency.
      • Farm wives would use butter as cash, exchanging their home-churned product for merchandise at the general store.
      • They won't want to exchange large wads of cash at the bank and raise suspicions of money laundering.
      • The store isn't just a place to exchange cash for computers… it's a place to create a genuine emotional branding experience, one that lasts.
      • These tickets are then exchanged for prizes at predictably confiscatory rates.
      • This leaves people with the choice of either getting whiplash from being forced to sit in the very front row, or to exchange their ticket for a Silvercity gift certificate.
      • According to the company's norms the ticket is non-transferable nor can it be exchanged for cash.

Phrases

  • in exchange

    作为交换

    • As a thing exchanged.

      作为交换

      at 8, he was carrying bags of groceries in exchange for a nickel
      Example sentencesExamples
      • A school is set to give up some of its land for a housing development in exchange for a new sports field, it has been revealed.
      • If a new law is passed permitting sex in exchange for money to legally take place I believe many more people would stay safe.
      • For those families with larger families they should be able to phone for a larger bin in exchange for their existing one.
      • The emperor gave the two men a bag of gold coins in exchange for their promise to begin working on the fabric immediately.
      • Restaurants try to trick you out of a little more money in exchange for a lot more food.
      • Israel would have received in exchange an equivalent geographic area on the West Bank.
      • He said the men took him to a forest and threatened to kill him but he convinced them to let him go in exchange for the car.
      • At first we asked him to tell us the truth and then in exchange we'd ask the court to soften his punishment.
      • Liz is just joining a long line of celebrities who are happy to endorse unlikely products in exchange for the right fee.
      • Olivier has agreed to help him improve his French in exchange for help in English.
      • These contracts offer companies lower tariffs in exchange for the right to shut off their power in times of need.
      • Several then offered me bits of dried fish or hard-boiled eggs in exchange.
      • Thus, it was of no surprise that they demanded nothing in exchange for freeing the twelve men.
      • I remember it clearly - Jason asking someone to sponsor his site in exchange for an iBook.
      • The money offered in exchange for such abuse is too tempting for many of them.
      • And besides, they have been providing entertainment in exchange for a tin of dog food per day.
      • You might be prepared to take a lower salary in exchange for that kind of security about your future.
      • If anyone needs a Gmail account, I have half a dozen to give away in exchange for a donation to the charity of your choice.
      • Many of these make false promises about solutions they can provide in exchange for hefty fees that they charge.
      • He said the boy often cleaned planes in exchange for flight time and was very familiar with operations at the school.

Origin

Late Middle English: from Old French eschange (noun), eschangier (verb), based on changer (see change). The spelling was influenced by Latin ex- ‘out, utterly’ (see ex-).

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