用现金翻译英语怎么说
『壹』 “用现金结账”怎么翻译
pay in cash
牛津高阶英汉双解词典:pay (in) cash 付现金
朗文高阶英汉词典:Is there any discount if i pay in cash.如果我用现金支付有折扣吗?
『贰』 英语翻译1.钱的说法有几种
copper coin铜板;
铜币; 钱;
fund基金;
储备;
现款;
wherewithal为做某事而需要的钱;
bucks钱
Money 总称
currency 某种货币
cash 现金
buck 美金回
dollar 美元答
cent 美分
penny 美角
『叁』 用现金的英语翻译 用现金用英语怎么说
用现金
[会计来] in cash更多源释义>>
[网络短语]
用现金 in cash;per Kasse;For cash
请用现金 Cash only please;Use cash
用现金外汇 Under Cash Foreign Exchange
『肆』 关于钱的英文单词词汇带翻译
1. Blood Money - 抚恤金
2. Boot Money - 企业赞助体育的钱
3. Bad Money - 无利可图的赔钱
4. Bank Money - 银行票据
5. Call Money - 活期存款
6. Cheap Money - 低息借款
7. Dear Money - 高息借款
8. Dark Money - 加班费
9. Earnest Money - 定金
10. Fairy Money - 捡的钱
11. Folding Money - 纸币
12. Front Money - 预付款
13. Glove Money - 贿赂
14. Good Money - 有利可图的钱
15. Hard Money - 价格稳定的钱(例如人民币,在亚洲经济中的作用)
16. Hot Money - 短期流动资金
17. Hush Money - 封口费
18. Pill Money - 零花钱(pocket money/pin money)
19. Push Money - 提成
20. Ready Money - 现金
21. Seed Money - 本金,本金
22. Silly Money - 来路不明的钱
23. Smart Money - 了解内情的人
24. Table Money - 餐费
25. Tall Money - 大笔的财富
26. Trust Money - 委托金
各种钱的英语表达:
1. Admission (n.) - 入场费
2. Charge (n.) - “原价、要价”,“记在账上”。常与for连用,不及物动词,为...收取费用。
3. Cost (n.) - 本义为“成本”、“原价”。
4. Fare (n.) - 票价,指旅客乘公共汽车、出租车、火车、轮船、飞机等所支付的费用。
5. Fee (n.) - 酬金,医生、律师或其他专门职业的佣金及会费、手续费、停车费等。
6. Freight (n.) - 运费,指海运、空运、陆运的费用。
7. Postage (n.) - 指邮费。
8. Price - 价格。
9. Rent (n.) - 土地、建筑物、房舍、机器等定期的租费。
10. Tip (n.) - 小费。
11. Toll (n.) - 道路、桥梁、港口、市场的捐税、通行费及电话费等。
12. Tuition (n.) - 学费。
关于金钱的英文阅读:数钱使人更快乐
众所周知,钱可以买到跑车和莫诺罗·布拉尼克斯牌女鞋这样的奢侈品,也可以买到食品等必需品,以及优惠待遇一类的无形资产。现在,有充分证据表明,数钱对心理有裨益。根据发表在《心理科学》杂志上的一项新研究,数钱能减少心理和生理疼痛,也能增加内在动力、无畏感和信心。
Focusing on the symbolic power of money, the study’s authors, Xinyue Zhou of Sun Yat-Sen University, Kathleen Vohs of the University of Minnesota, and Roy Baumeister of Florida State University, started with a simple hypothesis: reminders of money can alter how people experience social interactions—especially social acceptance and rejection.
To test the idea, the researchers took the following approach: 84 students at a university were divided into two groups. One group counted 80 large-denomination bills; the other group distributed 80 pieces of plain paper. All participants then played an online video game in which, using game controls, they could throw a ball and play catch with other Internet players. But the game was rigged so that after 10 throws, half the students would no longer get the ball thrown to them, while the rest of the students continued to play catch. When the game ended, participants who had been excluded from the second round of catch rated their level of social distress and how strong they felt. Those who had counted money before being socially excluded reported lower levels of social distress than those who had counted only paper. Additionally, the participants who had counted money also reported greater feelings of inner strength and self-sufficiency.
To see if counting money also reces physical pain—previous research indicates that psychological and physical pain are experienced in a similar way—the researchers repeated the earlier social-exclusion test, except this time they replaced the ball game with a pain-sensitivity task, in which half the participants were put in a moderate-pain condition (their hands were immersed in warm water), while the other half were subjected to a high-pain condition (hands were immersed in very hot water). Again, those who had counted money reported lower levels of pain.
To complete their study, the researchers concted additional experiments. They also found that reminders of having spent money aggravated feelings of social distress and that both social rejection and ideas of physical discomfort fueled participants’ desire for money as well as made them less generous.
So what does any of this mean for people in the real world—especially in this down-and-out economy? One implication, not entirely surprising, is that a job loss may pose an additional challenge. A layoff is a kind of rejection, and that could increase a person’s desire for money at the same time he or she has less than before, says Vohs of the University of Minnesota. Put another way: “The recession can make people crave what they can’t have,” she says.
Fortunately, the research also offers a possible solution for landing a new job. “It might be handy to sit down and count a stack of money before going out to the job interview,” says Baumeister of Florida State University. Another option? “Set up a screensaver that shows money,” says Vohs. “That might help ameliorate some of those feelings of being rejected.”
And while money can’t buy love, counting it could help you find that special person. “Maybe young men who are going out to bars to try to meet women should count money,” muses Baumeister. “I gather they have to approach a lot and get rejected a lot. I am not a specialist in bars, but it would make the men feel strong and probably make them not as bothered about being rejected over and over.”
『伍』 钱用英语怎么说
钱: Money;cash
取钱: withdraw cash;withdraw\draw cash;draw;to draw money withdraw cash
欠钱: in debt;to owe money;owe money
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『陆』 现钞 现汇 如何翻译
cash
n.现金
vt.兑现
现汇cash remitting
现汇
vt.宽恕, 赦免, 免除, 缓和, 推迟, 汇出, 传送, 使复职
vi.缓和, 汇款
n.移交的事物