释义 |
Definition of coiner in English: coinernoun ˈkɔɪnəˈkɔɪnər 1historical A person who coins money, in particular a maker of counterfeit coins. 〈史〉铸造钱币者(尤指假币制造者) Example sentencesExamples - The general opinion seemed to be that his father had been a noted coiner in New York, - an Irishman of the name of Melmody, - and, in one memoir, the probability of the descent was argued from Melmotte's skill in forgery.
- 4. But if the tenant uses the premises as a coiner's den or as a deposit for stolen goods, a single instance of such uses seems to me quite enough to satisfy the language of the statute.
- It might, in theory, have happened that coining would have become a form of business, in which private individuals turned silver into coins that would have been accepted by the reputation of the coiner… It did not happen in Greece.
Synonyms counterfeiter, falsifier, faker, copyist, imitator 2A person who invents a new word or phrase. 新词(或新义、新短语)的创造者 who is the coiner of ‘family values’ in its current sense? Example sentencesExamples - I asked Lott if he was indeed the coiner of this year's most radioactive phrase, and he demurred: ‘I don't recall being the first to use the word ‘nuclear.’
- If describing such practices as ‘one-to-one management’ constitutes buzz-phrase hijacking, at least the term's coiners consider the application compatible.
- I am not sure if the coiner of said phrase really meant quite this small.
- By the way, my friend Judith, coiner of the immortal phrase ‘a creeping nonchoice,’ was surprised to find herself on Hewlett's list of tearful women whose careers got in the way of childbearing.
- He would have envied the coiners and users of our modern anti-protectionist metaphors such as ‘the level playing field’ and ‘picking winners.’
- At least the coiners of the term ‘Body Core’ are in the right area to note where the most power originates for effective swimming propulsion.
- Mr. Caen, aka ‘Mr. Dot-Dot-Dot ’, was a local columnist and coiner of the word ‘beatnik’.
- The coiners of these terms were Cross et al..
- Molly Ivins was the first person I heard use ‘astroturf’ to refer to the generation of a phony grassroots movement, but someone else may have been the true coiner of the term.
- Deme came later to mean a local breeding population, despite the best attempts of its coiner.
- It seems as if Parker shares the discredited popular misconception of Wilde as a harmless, effete minor humorist, coiner of inconsequential bon mots, instead of the important figure that he was.
- Whoever was the coiner, the word was popularized by the Star Wars and Star Trek series of films and television shows and now is part of Hollywood linguistic lore.
- Dyson, coiner of the lovely phrase about the non-transferability of genius, should know that.
- The coiners of the word would have never used it to describe a geo-political system.
- As she raced up the stairs, she could hear sweet ecstatic giggles emitted into the air, and that low soft husky voice rolling words around better than the word coiner himself.
- My earliest cite is from September, 2002, but I don't have the resources to find the original coiner of the phrase.
Definition of coiner in US English: coinernounˈkɔɪnərˈkoinər 1historical A person who coins money, in particular a maker of counterfeit coins. 〈史〉铸造钱币者(尤指假币制造者) Example sentencesExamples - 4. But if the tenant uses the premises as a coiner's den or as a deposit for stolen goods, a single instance of such uses seems to me quite enough to satisfy the language of the statute.
- The general opinion seemed to be that his father had been a noted coiner in New York, - an Irishman of the name of Melmody, - and, in one memoir, the probability of the descent was argued from Melmotte's skill in forgery.
- It might, in theory, have happened that coining would have become a form of business, in which private individuals turned silver into coins that would have been accepted by the reputation of the coiner… It did not happen in Greece.
Synonyms counterfeiter, falsifier, faker, copyist, imitator 2A person who invents or devises a new word, sense, or phrase. 新词(或新义、新短语)的创造者 who is the coiner of “family values” in its current sense? Example sentencesExamples - He would have envied the coiners and users of our modern anti-protectionist metaphors such as ‘the level playing field’ and ‘picking winners.’
- Molly Ivins was the first person I heard use ‘astroturf’ to refer to the generation of a phony grassroots movement, but someone else may have been the true coiner of the term.
- By the way, my friend Judith, coiner of the immortal phrase ‘a creeping nonchoice,’ was surprised to find herself on Hewlett's list of tearful women whose careers got in the way of childbearing.
- The coiners of the word would have never used it to describe a geo-political system.
- The coiners of these terms were Cross et al..
- If describing such practices as ‘one-to-one management’ constitutes buzz-phrase hijacking, at least the term's coiners consider the application compatible.
- Dyson, coiner of the lovely phrase about the non-transferability of genius, should know that.
- Whoever was the coiner, the word was popularized by the Star Wars and Star Trek series of films and television shows and now is part of Hollywood linguistic lore.
- It seems as if Parker shares the discredited popular misconception of Wilde as a harmless, effete minor humorist, coiner of inconsequential bon mots, instead of the important figure that he was.
- My earliest cite is from September, 2002, but I don't have the resources to find the original coiner of the phrase.
- Mr. Caen, aka ‘Mr. Dot-Dot-Dot ’, was a local columnist and coiner of the word ‘beatnik’.
- As she raced up the stairs, she could hear sweet ecstatic giggles emitted into the air, and that low soft husky voice rolling words around better than the word coiner himself.
- Deme came later to mean a local breeding population, despite the best attempts of its coiner.
- I am not sure if the coiner of said phrase really meant quite this small.
- At least the coiners of the term ‘Body Core’ are in the right area to note where the most power originates for effective swimming propulsion.
- I asked Lott if he was indeed the coiner of this year's most radioactive phrase, and he demurred: ‘I don't recall being the first to use the word ‘nuclear.’
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