释义 |
Definition of numismatic in English: numismaticadjective ˌnjuːmɪzˈmatɪkˌnjuməzˈmædɪk Relating to or consisting of coins or medals. 钱币的;奖章的 Example sentencesExamples - In the numismatic section of the museum, coins of ancient and British India, and those of other countries are on display.
- By contrast, the heads of the other five Romans appear animated and in three-quarter view, without any obvious reference to the conventions of sculpture or numismatic portraits.
- It seems entirely reasonable to predict that the numismatic value of the first coins ever minted with extraterrestrial metals will skyrocket.
- With this, he appeared to dismiss out of hand the potential numismatic and heritage interest of any coins and bullion that might be recovered.
- He also struck the largest known gold coin from the ancient world, a numismatic masterpiece weighing 20 staters.
- The reason for the change in formulation is that numismatic specialists and antiquarians insisted that coins had to be made of metal.
- Although the attribution to Perikles is mistaken, the ivory medium is consistent with details of the statue given in numismatic evidence and ancient literary sources.
- The appearance of From Imperium to Auctoritas established Grant's credentials as a Roman numismatist; five more numismatic volumes would follow in the 1950's.
- Here Pukes draws widely on numismatic evidence to show that the titles and authority granted to Christ challenge those claimed by the Emperor.
- As I am an amateur ancient coin collector, my thoughts are somewhat focused on the numismatic area of the antiquities market, but I believe the analysis can cover other antiquarian items.
- There are only so many that can be mounted and framed without making his sitting room look like the British Museum's numismatic collection.
- Since 1982, in order to encourage the publication of books of scientific and general interest, the IAPN has been giving an honorific prize for the best numismatic publication of the year.
- As we shall see, this claim is very far from the truth; indeed both literary and numismatic evidence shows that Maximus actually returned to Britain, probably in 384, and conducted a successful campaign against the Picts.
- Drawing on numismatic evidence, Sourdel-Thomine deftly dismisses assertions that the title was gained only after the capture of Lahore in 582 / 1186.
- The Celtic sources are a few burials, some numismatic evidence, infrequent inscriptions and figurines, and Celtic loan words in Latin.
- Spink, a numismatic firm established in 1666, conducted the auction with 832 lots representing banknotes from 150 countries.
- Louis Jordan, a historian with a strong interest in numismatic issues, has written what is undoubtedly the definitive history of Massachusetts' seventeenth-century mint.
- Several speakers presented interesting numismatic topics, and several educational games took place.
- Hendlin, for his part, corroborates some of my observations and adds some of his own, drawing on his vast experience in numismatic science.
- Not all of this production simply bypassed the internal English economy by going directly to geld payments to the Danes, and Metcalf has stressed that the numismatic picture reflects the growing prosperity of England at this time.
OriginLate 18th century: from French numismatique, via Latin from Greek nomisma, nomismat- 'current coin', from nomizein 'use currently'. Rhymesachromatic, acrobatic, Adriatic, aerobatic, anagrammatic, aquatic, aristocratic, aromatic, asthmatic, athematic, attic, autocratic, automatic, axiomatic, bureaucratic, charismatic, chromatic, cinematic, climatic, dalmatic, democratic, diagrammatic, diaphragmatic, diplomatic, dogmatic, dramatic, ecstatic, emblematic, emphatic, enigmatic, epigrammatic, erratic, fanatic, hepatic, hieratic, hydrostatic, hypostatic, idiomatic, idiosyncratic, isochromatic, lymphatic, melodramatic, meritocratic, miasmatic, monochromatic, monocratic, monogrammatic, operatic, panchromatic, pancreatic, paradigmatic, phlegmatic, photostatic, piratic, plutocratic, pneumatic, polychromatic, pragmatic, prelatic, prismatic, problematic, programmatic, psychosomatic, quadratic, rheumatic, schematic, schismatic, sciatic, semi-automatic, Socratic, somatic, static, stigmatic, sub-aquatic, sylvatic, symptomatic, systematic, technocratic, thematic, theocratic, thermostatic, traumatic Definition of numismatic in US English: numismaticadjectiveˌnyo͞oməzˈmadikˌnjuməzˈmædɪk Relating to or consisting of coins, paper currency, and medals. 钱币的;奖章的 Example sentencesExamples - In the numismatic section of the museum, coins of ancient and British India, and those of other countries are on display.
- With this, he appeared to dismiss out of hand the potential numismatic and heritage interest of any coins and bullion that might be recovered.
- Louis Jordan, a historian with a strong interest in numismatic issues, has written what is undoubtedly the definitive history of Massachusetts' seventeenth-century mint.
- By contrast, the heads of the other five Romans appear animated and in three-quarter view, without any obvious reference to the conventions of sculpture or numismatic portraits.
- The Celtic sources are a few burials, some numismatic evidence, infrequent inscriptions and figurines, and Celtic loan words in Latin.
- He also struck the largest known gold coin from the ancient world, a numismatic masterpiece weighing 20 staters.
- As I am an amateur ancient coin collector, my thoughts are somewhat focused on the numismatic area of the antiquities market, but I believe the analysis can cover other antiquarian items.
- As we shall see, this claim is very far from the truth; indeed both literary and numismatic evidence shows that Maximus actually returned to Britain, probably in 384, and conducted a successful campaign against the Picts.
- The appearance of From Imperium to Auctoritas established Grant's credentials as a Roman numismatist; five more numismatic volumes would follow in the 1950's.
- The reason for the change in formulation is that numismatic specialists and antiquarians insisted that coins had to be made of metal.
- Drawing on numismatic evidence, Sourdel-Thomine deftly dismisses assertions that the title was gained only after the capture of Lahore in 582 / 1186.
- It seems entirely reasonable to predict that the numismatic value of the first coins ever minted with extraterrestrial metals will skyrocket.
- Since 1982, in order to encourage the publication of books of scientific and general interest, the IAPN has been giving an honorific prize for the best numismatic publication of the year.
- Hendlin, for his part, corroborates some of my observations and adds some of his own, drawing on his vast experience in numismatic science.
- Several speakers presented interesting numismatic topics, and several educational games took place.
- There are only so many that can be mounted and framed without making his sitting room look like the British Museum's numismatic collection.
- Not all of this production simply bypassed the internal English economy by going directly to geld payments to the Danes, and Metcalf has stressed that the numismatic picture reflects the growing prosperity of England at this time.
- Although the attribution to Perikles is mistaken, the ivory medium is consistent with details of the statue given in numismatic evidence and ancient literary sources.
- Here Pukes draws widely on numismatic evidence to show that the titles and authority granted to Christ challenge those claimed by the Emperor.
- Spink, a numismatic firm established in 1666, conducted the auction with 832 lots representing banknotes from 150 countries.
OriginLate 18th century: from French numismatique, via Latin from Greek nomisma, nomismat- ‘current coin’, from nomizein ‘use currently’. |