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
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.
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。
Grandpa keeps a single greenback from 1928 in a frame above his desk.
爺爺把一張 1928 年的美鈔放在書桌上方的相框裡珍藏著。
After the harvest, the farmer exchanged his crops for a stack of greenbacks at the market.
收割之後,農夫在市場上用農作物換了一疊美鈔。
- 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.