greenback

/ˈɡriːnbæk/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈɡriːnbæk/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈgrēn-ˌbak/ (ame, mw)

greenback — 名詞

  • greenbacksingular
  • greenbacksplural

1. an informal word for a US dollar bill or a piece of American paper money — the n

1.名詞B1
釋義

美鈔

美國紙幣的俗稱

an informal word for a US dollar bill or a piece of American paper money — the name comes from the green ink used on the back of the notes first issued during the Civil War.

例句

Kenji pulled a crumpled greenback from his jeans and paid for the coffee.

Kenji 從牛仔褲口袋掏出一張皺巴巴的美鈔,付了咖啡錢。

informal term for a dollar bill in everyday payment

The antique shop in Savannah still accepts only cash — every greenback counted by hand.

薩凡納的那間古董店仍然只收現金——每張美鈔都用手點算。

同義詞
  • dollar bill

    the neutral, everyday term; greenback is more colourful and informal

  • bill

    shorter and very common; greenback adds a distinctly American flavour

  • note

    used in British English for paper money; greenback is specifically American

用法筆記

Rarely used for coins — the word suggests a paper bill. Common in informal conversation and in historical writing about 19th- and early 20th-century American finance.

常見錯誤

I have five greenbacks in my wallet — a five-dollar bill.
I have five greenbacks in my wallet.
💡'Greenback' already means a dollar bill; you do not need to add 'dollar bill' after it.
Greenbacks are the official currency of Canada.
Greenbacks are an informal name for US paper money, not official currency of any country.
💡'Greenback' refers specifically to US dollars, not any paper money.