单词 | exchange |
释义 | exchangen. I. The action or process of exchanging. 1. The action, or an act, of reciprocal giving and receiving: a. of things in general. Proverb, exchange is no robbery. ΘΚΠ the world > time > change > exchange > [noun] change?c1225 changingc1350 interchangingc1374 exchangec1384 permutationa1398 commutation1496 achange1530 chopping and changing1548 interchange1548 exchanging1553 promutation1560 intercourse1576 counterchange1579 chopping1581 counter-cambio?1592 interchangementa1616 commerce1631 swapping1695 barter1819 counterchanging1881 switching1904 va-et-vient1919 switch-around1981 c1384 G. Chaucer Hous of Fame ii. 189 Of loues moo eschaunges Then euer cornes were in graunges. c1400 Test. Love (1560) i. 275/2 My moeble is insuffisaunte to countervayle the price of this jewell, or els to make the eschaunge. 1552 Act 5 & 6 Edw. VI c. 19 §1 To exchange gold for silver..so that no man..did take no profit for making such exchange. 1600 W. Shakespeare Much Ado about Nothing ii. i. 290 I giue away my selfe for you, and doate vpon the exchange . View more context for this quotation 1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. i. 31 In lieu of what he left behind him, (Exchange is no Robbery,) he carried along with him some of St. Alban's Dust. 1713 J. Addison Guardian No. 157 They lend their Corn; they make Exchanges. 1860 J. Tyndall Glaciers of Alps i. xxv. 182 The due exchange of loads having been made, we advanced upon the glacier. 1863 C. Dickens Let. 10 Mar. (1998) X. 222 Let us make an exchange of child-stories. b. of goods, merchandize; = barter n.; in political economy often with wider sense of ‘commerce’. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > barter > [noun] formanginga1300 nifferc1400 barteringc1440 roring1440 commutation1496 scorsing1509 chopping and changing1548 exchange1553 truck1553 block1568 bartery1570 chopping1581 scorse1590 barter1592 trucking1594 swap1625 truckage1641 truck trade1740 handling1850 1553 R. Eden in tr. S. Münster Treat. Newe India Pref. sig. aavijv Salomons factours for exchaunge of other marchaundyse. 1767 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. (new ed.) II. 446 If it be a commutation of goods for goods, it is more properly an exchange; but, if it be a transferring of goods for money, it is called a sale: which is a method of exchange introduced, etc. 1863 J. E. T. Rogers Man. Polit. Econ. (1876) xvii. 224 No one questions the natural rights of free exchange. c. of prisoners of war. ΘΚΠ society > authority > punishment > imprisonment > prisoner > [noun] > exchange of prisoners exchangec1374 c1374 G. Chaucer Troilus & Criseyde iv. 130 Yf þey wolde graunte..Theschaunge of her. a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) I. ccxxxiii. f. clv Meanys was made vpon eyther syde for delyuerie & exchaunge of ye prysoners. 1611 J. Speed Hist. Great Brit. ix. v. 452/1 These two Chieftaines wearied with irksomnes of irons..made exchange the one for the other. 1698 Mem. E. Ludlow I. 109 Procuring my exchange for his two Sons. 1780 B. Lincoln in J. Sparks Corr. Amer. Revol. (1883) III. 96 An exchange, when made a prisoner, is one of the rights of a soldier. 1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. Exchange, a mutual agreement between contending powers for exchange of prisoners. d. of blows, passes, strokes (in fencing, games, etc.), salutations. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of play, actions, or postures > [noun] > actions exchange1604 measuring cast1647 winner1811 glovework1822 piledriver1858 cockshot1861 legwork1868 footwork1871 winning stroke1884 teamwork1885 benching1904 three-sixty1927 wrong-footing1928 power play1932 major1951 sharpshooting1976 1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet v. ii. 216 If Hamlet giue the first or second hit, Or quit in answere of the third exchange . View more context for this quotation a1687 E. Waller Battle of Summer-Islands 111 Thus they parted, with exchange of harms. 1863 A. P. Stanley Lect. Jewish Church I. xiii. 302 We hear the exchange of salutations between the reapers and their master. 1882 Daily Tel. 18 July 2 This [game at tennis] fell to E. Renshaw after some good exchanges. e. of military or naval commissions, etc. (see quot.). Also attributive, as in exchange system. ΚΠ 1823 G. Crabb Universal Technol. Dict. Exchange between officers, who remove from one regiment to another, or from full pay to half pay, for which a consideration is usually given, called the Difference. 1834 F. Marryat Peter Simple II. xii. 189 Captain Falcon..received his commission that evening, and the next day the exchanges were made. 1867 W. H. Smyth & E. Belcher Sailor's Word-bk. Exchange, the removal of officers from one ship to another. 1875 Act 38 Vict. c. 16 Her Majesty may..authorise exchanges to be made from one regiment..to another regiment. 1875 Parl. Deb. 3rd Ser. 222 670/2 In the Artillery, Engineers, and Marines, they had from time immemorial had the Exchange system, yet they had never adopted the Purchase system. f. in Chess, of pieces captured. to force the exchange: to play so as to compel your opponent to take one piece for another. to gain the exchange, to win the exchange, to lose the exchange: to take or lose a superior piece in exchange for an inferior. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > chess > [noun] > strategy > specific strategies or tactics unpinning1607 defence1614 fork1656 attack1733 backgame1750 castling1813 exchange1823 pin1868 fringe-variation1898 fidation1910 sacrifice1915 unpin1922 pawn storm1926 Siesta variation1935 liquidation1965 sac1965 1823 G. Crabb Universal Technol. Dict. at Chess Exchanges..often give the adversary an advantage. 1848 H. Staunton Chess-player's Handbk. (ed. 2) 21 When a player gains a Rook for a Bishop or a Knight, it is termed winning the exchange. 1865 Househ. Chess Mag. 34 This move loses, at least, the ‘exchange’. 1878 H. E. Bird Chess Openings 105 Black gains the exchange, and should win. g. (to give, to have, to take, etc.) †by exchange, in exchange †of, for (something else). ΚΠ c1540 (?a1400) Destr. Troy 3182 Priam..may prestly suppose His suster to sese, sent by eschaunge. 1611 Bible (King James) Matt. xvi. 26 Or what shall a man giue in exchange for his soule? View more context for this quotation a1616 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor (1623) ii. ii. 225 There is money..spend all I haue, onely giue me so much of your time in exchange [printedenchange; 1630 exchange] of it. View more context for this quotation 1663 B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders 109 A very gainfull returne of Amber Greese and vendible commodities in exchange of Iron Tools. 1667 J. Dryden Indian Emperour v. ii. 65 O spare her Life, and in exchange, take mine. 1778 T. Jones Hoyle's Games Improved 147 You can get two Pieces in Exchange for your Queen. 1837 W. Irving Adventures Capt. Bonneville III. 193 Giving horses in exchange for the articles of which they stand in need. 2. Law. ‘A mutual grant of equal interests, the one in consideration of the other’ (Blackstone Comm. (1767) II. 323). ΚΠ 1528–30 tr. T. Littleton Tenures (new ed.) f. vv In exchaunge it behoueth that the estates that both partyes haue in the landes so exchaunged be egall. 1642 tr. J. Perkins Profitable Bk. iv. §284. 126 Now is to shew in what time the estates of exchanges ought to be executed. 1805 W. Cruise Digest Laws Eng. Real Prop. V. 155 A husband and wife joined in exchanging lands which were the estate of the wife, with a stranger for other lands, and the exchange was executed. 1875 K. E. Digby Introd. Hist. Law Real Prop. x. 331 Conveyances by way of exchange. 3. a. The action of giving or receiving coin in return for coin of equivalent value either of the same or a foreign country, for bullion, or for notes or bills; a bargain respecting this; the trade of a money-changer. †bank of exchange: the office of a money-changer or banker. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > money-changing exchange1377 wisseling1463 money-changing1623 agiotage1726 agio1817 1335 Act 9 Edw. III stat. 2 c. 7 Et que table deschange soit a Dovorri & aillours, ou & qant il semblera a nos & a notre consail per faire eschange.] 1377 W. Langland Piers Plowman B. v. 249 Eschaunges and cheuesances with suche chaffare I dele. c1405 (c1387–95) G. Chaucer Canterbury Tales Prol. (Hengwrt) (2003) l. 280 Wel koude he in eschaunge sheeldes [i.e. Fr. écus] selle. 1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection ii. sig. Hvv He maketh his banke & exchange with some ryche marchaunt. 1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum Exchaunge, wher as gayne or lucre is gotten at the second hande, promercium. 1574 J. Baret Aluearie E 360 The losse and decay for the exchange of some piece of gold or siluer. Collybus. 1576 W. Lambarde Perambulation of Kent 127 Not without good cause..hath Douer..beene..assigned by lawes of Parleament, as a speciall place for passage and eschaunge. 1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues at Change Banke of Exchange, or place wherein money is exchanged, and commodities bartered for. 1894 N.E.D. at Exchange Mod. I lost a good deal by the exchange of some 20-mark pieces that I brought home. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > management of money > income, revenue, or profit > profit > [noun] > profit made by moneylender exchange1552 usury1567 procreatea1690 society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > money-changing > money changer's establishment wissel1482 exchange1552 bureau de change1853 1552 R. Huloet Abcedarium Anglico Latinum at Banqueter Or he that kepeth a banck of mony, of whome people doo borowe money vpon gayne, called exchaunge. 1751 Chambers's Cycl. (ed. 7) Exchange is also used for the profit, which a merchant..or broker makes of a sum of money received..Sometimes also used for the..profit allowed for the moneys advanced in any one's behalf. 4. a. ‘That species of mercantile transactions by which the debts of individuals residing at a distance from their creditors are cancelled without the transmission of money’ (McCulloch), by the use of ‘bills of exchange’. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > money-changing > rate of exchange course of exchange1724 exchange rate1896 14851 [see sense 5]. 1560 in Harl. Misc. (Malh.) II. 478 By this reformation of base monies..the accoumpte, which, by merchauntes, is called the Eschaunge, shall..aryse in estimation of the monies of Englande. a1616 W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew (1623) iv. ii. 90 I haue bils for monie by exchange From Florence, and must heere [at Padua] deliuer them. View more context for this quotation a1627 J. Hayward Life & Raigne Edward Sixt (1630) 9 Hee was skilful in the exchange beyond the seas. 1690 J. Child Disc. Trade ix. 147 The course of the Exchange, is generally above the intrinsick value or Par of the Coins of foreign countries, we..lose by such Exchanges. 1692 J. Locke Some Considerations Lowering Interest 180 A Million then being to be returned from England to Holland in Money... This presently makes the Exchange very high. 1695 J. Locke Further Considerations conc. Raising Value of Money 17 Foreign Exchange is the paying of Money in one Country, to receive it in another. 1724 J. Swift Some Observ. Wood's Half-pence 10 This Difference is almost 35 per Cent. which is double to the highest Exchange of Money. 1776 A. Smith Inq. Wealth of Nations II. iv. iii. 307 The ordinary course of exchange might..be a tolerable indication of the ordinary state of debt and credit between [any two places]. 1788 T. Jefferson Writings (1859) II. 468 In this paper, you will see the exchange of yesterday. 1861 G. J. Goschen Theory Foreign Exchanges 48 The limits within which the exchanges may vary..are on the one extreme, the par value, plus the cost of the transmission of bullion; on the other extreme, the par value, minus this identical sum. 1861 G. J. Goschen Theory Foreign Exchanges (1864) 75 The natural value of the rouble..would have been..5 per cent. below the nominal par of exchange. 1868 E. Seyd Bullion 394 The actual Mintage Par of Exchange between London and Paris is £1 = fcs. 25·2215..For all practicable purposes, however, we may call the Par of Exchange fcs. 25·22½ centimes. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > use of bills of exchange > types of re-exchange1480 dry exchange1485 recamby1489 rechange1489 redrawing1671 short-exchange1866 1485–6 Act 3 Hen. VII c. 5 Eny bargayne..by the name of drye exchaunge..be utterly voide. 1572 T. Wilson Disc. Vsurye (1584) 117 b The second kind [of exchange by bills]..called sicke and drie exchange..is practised when one doth borrowe money by exchange for a strange region, at longer or shorter distance of time, to serue his turne the rather thereby, not minding to make anie reall paiment abroad; but compoundeth with the exchanger to haue it returned backe againe, according as the exchange shall passe from thence to London, for such distance of time as they were agreed vpon. 1682 J. Scarlett Stile of Exchanges 266 Dry Exchanges consist in a giving of Monyes..but the repayment is to be made after a certain time in the same place where the Monyes was given, and such a sum certain over and above, as the giver of Monyes can get and agree for. c. Arithmetic. (See quot.) ΚΠ 1849 J. H. Freese Commerc. Class-bk. ii. 69. 1859 B. Smith Arith. & Algebra (ed. 6) 513 Exchange is the Rule by which we find how much money of one country is equivalent to a given sum of another country, according to a given course of Exchange. 5. = Bill of Exchange (see bill n.3 9). Still occasionally used in commercial correspondence. Also elliptical in first, second, or third of exchange (= French première, etc. de change). ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > use of bills of exchange exchange1485 bill-broking1764 arbitrage1875 society > trade and finance > money > medium of exchange or currency > paper money > promissory notes or bills of exchange > [noun] > a promissory note or bill of exchange exchange1485 bill1579 bill1613 hundi1619 assignment1622 cambio1645 note1653 order1673 bank bill1682 banknote1695 assignation1704 promissory note1710 note of hand1728 stiff1823 time bill1842 PO1861 marker1887 1485 W. Caxton tr. Paris & Vienne (1957) 49 He had receyued the eschaunge that vyenne had sente hym. 1485 W. Caxton tr. Paris & Vienne (1957) 48 She sendeth to you an eschaunge of thre thousand floryns. 1894 N.E.D. at Exchange Mod. (Form of Foreign Bill.) Sixty days after sight of this Second of Exchange (First and Third unpaid) pay to the order of, etc. 6. In senses more correctly expressed by change n.: (a) substitution of one person or thing for another; †(b) variation of conduct, etc. (obsolete); †(c) transmutation; mutation, alteration (obsolete). ΚΠ 1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis III. 351 I se the world stond ever upon eschaunge. c1420 Pallad. on Husb. i. 236 Preve eke the unpreved grene afore eschaunge. c1430 J. Lydgate Dispraise of Women xii These women..Most loue eschaunge and doublenes. 1548 E. Gest Treat. againste Masse sig. Bviiv No more can thee bread be christes body wythoute the exchaunge of the matter therof unto the sayd body. 1572 R. Harrison tr. L. Lavater Of Ghostes ii. xvi. 165 The exchaunge of Empires, and of other things, are in his power. 1589 G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie iii. xv. 142 Your figures that worke auricularly by exchange..vsing one case for another, or tense, or person. 1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost iv. ii. 42 The polusion holdes in the Exchange . View more context for this quotation 1859 J. M. Jephson & L. Reeve Narr. Walking Tour Brittany 235 At the only inn..everything was in comfortless confusion, arising from an exchange of tenants. II. Something offered in exchange. 7. a. A person or thing that is offered or given in exchange or substitution for another. ΘΚΠ the world > time > change > exchange > [noun] > person or thing exchanged pricea1300 botchmenta1425 changinga1425 exchange1490 tit for tat1546 changeling?1548 some and some1573 tip for tap1573 quid pro quo1816 1490 in T. Stapleton Plumpton Corr. (1839) 100 They will take yt in ferme, or els make yt exchaunce with you of lands lyeing in Yorkshire. 1608 W. Shakespeare King Lear xx. 266 A plot vpon her vertuous husbands life, And the exchange my brother. View more context for this quotation 1608 W. Shakespeare King Lear xxiv. 95 Ther's my exchange [sc. a glove] . View more context for this quotation 1669 Ld. Orrery Parthenissa VI. iii. v. 63 Having avowedly in his power a sufficient Exchange for him. 1697 J. Dryden Ded. Georgics in tr. Virgil Wks. sig. ¶2v The respect and love which was paid you..was a wise exchange for the honours of the Court. b. A newspaper sent to the office of another newspaper in exchange for the latter. Also attributive. ΘΚΠ society > communication > journalism > journal > newspaper > [noun] > other types of newspaper gazette1607 contemporary1670 packet1678 exchange1798 funny paper1837 blanket sheet1839 broadsheet1840 special1861 cocoa press1907 bladder1936 regional1958 electronic paper1967 free1982 1798 Deb. Congr. U.S. 27 Mar. II. 1318/2 The great number of exchange papers which pass between the printers of newspapers. 1836 (U.S.) Public Documents (1837) I. 545 The object of authorizing printers' exchange-papers to pass in the mails free of postage, would be further promoted by extending the privilege to exchanges with printers in foreign countries. 1837 in Canad. Hist. Rev. (1938) XIX. 15 Nineteen-twentieths of our exchanges are printed on a fairer quality [paper]. 1848 Yale Literary Mag. 14 47 Our exchanges. 1851 Yale Literary Mag. 16 372 No Exchanges have come to hand. 1886 Christian Life 23 Jan. 37/3 ‘The pulpit and the people are rising out of the superstitions into the real religion’—so remarks an exchange. III. A place of exchange. 8. King's or Queen's Exchange: see quot. ΚΠ 1601 Queen Elizabeth I Let. base Moneys in T. Stafford Pac. Hib. 149 We require you..to giue all attention of it..[by] bringing in all others according to the course of Our Exchange, which by Our Proclamation you may perceiue that wee haue instituted. 1614 W. Camden Remaines (rev. ed.) 204 The King..was enforced to call in the old money..and to erect Exchanges where the weight of old money was exchanged for new. 1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) The Queen's Exchange. 1751 Chambers's Cycl. (ed. 7) (at cited word) The King's Exchange or the place appointed by the king for exchange of plate, or bullion for the king's coin. ΚΠ a1569 A. Kingsmill Most Excellent & Comfortable Treat. (new ed.) (1585) A iij To lay it [a talent] with you in exchange and banke. 1575 G. Fenton Golden Epist. f. 42 He whipped out the Usurers, reuersed their exchaunges, and dispersed their treasors. 10. a. A building in which the merchants of a town assemble for the transaction of business. Cf. burse n. 3b, change n. 2.The ‘Burse’ or Exchange built in London by Sir T. Gresham in 1566 received from Queen Elizabeth the name of Royal Exchange, which is retained by the present building. Gresham's building is in 17th cent. sometimes called the Old Exchange, to distinguish it from the New Exchange, i.e. ‘Britain's Burse’. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > trading place > a centre of commerce > [noun] > place where merchants meet change1317 burse1553 exchange1589 rialto1600 trades hall1700 trade hall1822 bourse1845 1589 ‘Pasquill of England’ Returne of Pasquill sig. Aij I little thought to meete thee so suddainly vpon the Exchange. 1593 J. Norden Speculum Brit.: Middlesex i. 35 Sir Thomas Gresham..named it the Burse, whereunto afterward Queene Elizabeth gave the name of Royall Exchange. a1610 J. Healey tr. Epictetus Manuall (1636) 39 You cannot builde it a schoole, an Exchange, or a bathe. 1611 T. Coryate Crudities sig. E5 As for their Exchang [sic] where they sell many fine and curious things, there are two or three prety walks in it. a1640 P. Massinger City-Madam (1658) i. i. 128 Being forc'd to fetch these from the Old Exchange, These from the Tower, and these from Westminster. 1710 London Gaz. No. 4708/4 Inquire at the..Royal Exchange East Country-Walk in Exchange Time. 1717 Lady M. W. Montagu Let. 17 May (1965) I. 359 Behind the Mosque is an Exchange full of shops. 1790 J. Willock Voy. diverse parts ix. 298 The exchange [Königsberg] is a beautiful edifice. 1846 C. Dickens Dombey & Son (1848) iv. 24 The Royal Exchange was close at hand. b. Preceded by some defining word that indicates a special branch of business: as coal-exchange, corn-exchange, hop-exchange, stock-exchange, wool-exchange, for which see those words. c. = telephone exchange n. at telephone n. Compounds 3. ΘΚΠ society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telephony > telephone equipment > [noun] > exchange telephone exchange1878 local exchange1879 call office1882 central1883 exchange1887 private branch exchange1904 PBX1914 zone centre1934 1887 J. M. W. Yerrington Trial H. K. Goodwin 11 Mr. Swan..became engaged in the telephone business..having charge of the Lawrence Exchange. 1888 Encycl. Brit. XXIII. 133/2 In a large town it is neither practicable nor desirable to connect each subscriber directly with all the other subscribers, hence a system of ‘exchanges’ has been adopted. 1921 Dict. Occup. Terms (1927) § 756 Exchange attendant (Post Office); agrees to provide accommodation for small telephone exchange on his own premises and acts as telephonist. 1938 D. Du Maurier Rebecca xxv. 428 Something was buzzing in the telephone. I heard Beatrice shouting, ‘Hullo, hullo, don't cut us off, exchange,’ and then there was a click, and silence. 11. U.S. A dram-shop. ΚΠ 1882 G. A. Sala Amer. Revisited II. ii. 13 here [i.e. in New Orleans] the dram shops are called ‘exchanges’. 12. spec. used attributively to denote a reciprocal arrangement whereby two teachers, students, etc., occupy each other's position for a limited period of time; also designating one of the two parties in such an arrangement. ΚΠ 1912 Nation 6 June 555 The system of ‘exchange professors’ between France and the United States. 1934 H. Miller Tropic of Cancer 265 I had been offered a trivial post as exchange professor of English, one of those Franco-American amity arrangements. 1936 L. C. Douglas White Banners viii. 164 Springer of Cambridge..had just arrived as an exchange lecturer. 1953 D. Parry Going up—Going Down ii. 51 I might begin with an exchange-fellowship at Yale or Harvard. 1959 Listener 26 Feb. 364/1 Nowadays, more emphasis is placed on teaching foreign languages phonetically and on trying to tie lessons in with exchange visits of pupils abroad. 1960 Encounter Mar. 77/1 Young exchange students. 1966 J. Caird Perturbing Spirit xxiii. 253 She'd got an exchange teaching job for a year to the U.S.A. 1967 Guardian 29 May 8/5 British exchange teachers in the United States, and vice versa, are tax exempt. Compounds C1. General attributive. a. (In sense 6.) exchange-time n. ΚΠ 1710 London Gaz. No. 4708/4 In Exchange Time. b. (In senses 3, 4.) exchange-bank n. ΚΠ 1535 Bible (Coverdale) Luke xix. 23 Wherfore than hast thou not delyuered my money to the exchaunge banke. exchange-broker n. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > use of bills of exchange > one dealing in bills of exchange banker1484 change broker1683 exchange-broker1704 cambist1809 bill-broker1833 note broker1853 arbitrageur1870 arbitragist1881 arb1983 1704 Cocker's Eng. Dict. App. Exchange Brokers, men that tell how the Exchange of Money goes, and finds those that will Exchange. exchange-office n. ΚΠ 1863 H. Fawcett Man. Polit. Econ. iii. ix. 416 A person wishing to exchange English money for French money goes to an exchange office in London. exchange-shop n. ΚΠ 1631 T. Powell Tom of All Trades 48 A pretty way of breeding young Maides in an Exchange shop, or St. Martins le grand. C2. exchange-cap n. (see quot.). ΚΠ 1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. I. 815/1 Exchange-cap, a fine quality of paper..used for printing bills of exchange, etc. exchange clearing n. a method of bilateral payment through central banks. ΚΠ 1934 P. Einzig Exchange Control xiii. 138 It is difficult even to get an adequate answer to the question as to what Exchange Clearing really is. Some people simply class it with exchange restrictions. Technically, they are right, for the act of compelling importers to pay the purchase price to the Central Bank instead of..to their creditors undoubtedly interferes with..exchange operations. exchange control n. governmental control of purchases of foreign currency and of transfer of currency to foreign countries. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > other aspects of money dealing intromission1567 bargain and sale1602 transferability1776 exchange control1931 ratissage1957 fix1965 money laundering1974 1931 Times 5 Dec. 16/3 The Financial Committee and the Economic Committee of the League of Nations have placed the question of foreign exchange control on their agenda. 1932 Times 1 Apr. 12/4 Concern is expressed..over the consequences of the exchange control measures and counter-measures in and around Austria. 1934 L. Robbins Great Depression viii. 179 A régime of this sort must necessitate the most extensive measures of exchange control. exchange editor n. ‘an editor who inspects, and culls from, periodicals, or exchanges, for his own publication’ (Webster). ΚΠ 1877 Harper's Mag. Dec. 53/2 An ‘exchange’ editor, whose duty it is to read the hundreds of papers sent in from outside towns [etc.]. exchange force n. Physics an assumed force between atomic particles responsible for the exchange of charges or other co-ordinates. ΚΠ 1934 Nature 30 June 981/1 The possibility of deducing the exchange forces between neutrons and protons. 1962 Gloss. Terms Nucl. Sci. (B.S.I.) 44 Exchange force, a type of force, acting between two particles, the mathematical expression of which involves an interchange of their coordinates. Such forces are thought to act between nucleons. ΚΠ 1631 J. Done Polydoron sig. E10v There are 3 sorts of honest men, viz. your exchangeman for the bearing up of his credit, [etc.]. 1783 Ainsworth's Thes. Linguæ Latinæ (new ed.) ii Nūgĭvendus..an exchange-man, or milliner. exchange newspaper n. = sense 7 b. ΚΠ 1855 Knickerbocker Mag. 45 244 Are there not piles and piles of exchange newspapers lying on the table? exchange paper n. (see sense 7b above). exchange rate n. = rate n.1 5b (cf. rate of exchange under 4a). ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > money-changing > rate of exchange course of exchange1724 exchange rate1896 1896 R. Barclay Disturb. Stand. Value (ed. 2) v. 134 The silver equivalents of the gold prices..would fall in view of the difference in exchange rates. 1928 Britain's Industr. Future (Liberal Industr. Inq.) v. xxviii. 413 Stable foreign exchange-rates are not enough. exchange transfusion n. the removal of some of a person's blood with the simultaneous transfusion of other (normal) blood. ΚΠ 1946 Jrnl. Laboratory & Clinical Med. 31 1017 The main obstacle to the successful performance of an exchange transfusion in infants is not the injection but the process of withdrawal, which is hampered by the coagulation of the infant's blood. 1963 Lancet 12 Jan. 86/1 For some years the umbilical vein in the umbilical cord has been used for exchange transfusions. 1970 Glasgow Herald 19 Nov. 1/7 Because of the deterioration of the sugar in the blood it was decided, after consultation, to carry out an exchange blood transfusion. exchange-value n. = exchangeable value n. at exchangeable adj. 2. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > monetary value > [noun] > value judged by price of other equivalent goods exchangeable value1776 exchange-value1869 1869 H. Fawcett Man. Polit. Econ. (ed. 3) i. i. 7 Exchange value is the characteristic which stamps a commodity with the attribute of wealth. ΚΠ 1683 England's Vanity 32 Every Exchange-Wench is usher'd in by them [Pearles] into her stalls. 1707 C. Cibber Double Gallant (ed. 2) iv. 50 To treat a Woman of Quality like an Exchange Wench. ΚΠ 1697 C. Cibber Womans Wit ii. 12 Your Ladyship's being out of Humour with the Exchange Woman, for Shaping your Ruffles so Odiously..made you a little too reserv'd. Draft additions 1993 An alternation of statements or responses in the course of a conversation; an interlocution. Also (usually in plural), a conversation, dialogue, or argument. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > speech > conversation > [noun] > exchange of words give and take1837 pat-ball1927 ping-pong1934 exchange1939 back-and-forth1941 1863 [see sense 1d]. 1939 P. G. Wodehouse Uncle Fred in Springtime i. 16 Horace, who had been listening to these philosophical exchanges with some impatience, intervened. 1966 B. Malamud Fixer iv. ii. 123 Marfa had listened intently to the exchange between the men. 1970 D. Jacobson Rape of Tamar xii. 147 Perhaps the strangest thing about exchanges of this kind, which have become very common between them, is that they both mean what they say. 1981 C. Priest Affirmation xiv. 125 I was aware..that Seri and Lareen were speaking to each other: polite exchanges and pleasantries, places for Seri to visit on the island, an hotel she might stay in. Draft additions 1993 Medicine. An amount of a given foodstuff containing specified quantities of fat, protein, and carbohydrate, considered as a replacement for an equivalent quantity of another foodstuff which is excluded from the diet of a diabetic; also, the quantity of fat, protein, or carbohydrate specified. ΘΚΠ the world > food and drink > food > food otherwise characterized > [noun] > substitute food or ingredient > specific for diabetic exchange1949 the world > food and drink > food > [noun] > food in terms of quality or quantity > specific quantity of carbohydrate, fat, or protein exchange1984 1949 Proc. Amer. Diabetic Assoc. 9 403 Foods were arranged in the groups listed below and units or ‘exchanges’ in each group were assigned the food values shown in Table I. 1950 Jrnl. Amer. Diabetic Assoc. 26 576/1 The objectives..were to prepare a set of representative values suitable for use in dietary calculation and to develop a simplified method for planning the diet, including several ‘exchange lists’ of foods of similar food value. 1960 A. Marble in R. H. Williams Diabetes xxxiii. 456 The physician directs the patient as to the number of exchanges to take from the various lists. 1984 Balance Oct. 5/4 As a rough guide, each of the following contains one exchange or portion (ie 10 g of carbohydrate): two teaspoons of sugar or glucose, two boiled sweets, [etc.]. 1987 C. Kilo et al. Diabetes xv. 158 One exchange of milk contains 12 grams of carbohydrate. Draft additions 1993 Exchange Rate Mechanism n. a method of stabilizing exchange rates within the European Monetary System, by which the currencies of some EC countries are linked to the ECU to limit excessive exchange-rate fluctuations; abbreviated ERM n. at E n.1 Initialisms. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > money-changing > rate of exchange > determination of Arbitration of Exchange1811 Exchange Rate Mechanism1978 ERM1982 1978 Financial Times 6 Dec. 2/6 Following are the main points of the official communiqué issued by the European Council yesterday..announcing details of the planned European Monetary System (EMS)... The ECU will be used..as the denominator..for the exchange rate mechanism. 1991 Economist 29 June 27/1 Sterling's membership of the exchange-rate mechanism was acceptable at the current wide 6% band because ‘it is in a way like anchoring something to the gold standard’. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1894; most recently modified version published online March 2022). exchangev. 1. a. transitive. To change away; to dispose of (commodities, possessions, etc.) by exchange or barter; to give, relinquish, or lose (something) whilst receiving something else in return. Also absol. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > barter > [verb (transitive)] > dispose of by barter exchange1483 chaffer1530 to chop away1554 swap1590 truck1686 to barter away1690 1483 W. Caxton tr. A. Chartier Curial sig. v They selle bye or eschange somtyme theyr rentes or propre vestementis. 1545 Act 37 Hen. VIII c. 9 §5 The Wares..so bargained, sold, exchanged or shifted. 1611 Bible (King James) Ezek. xlviii. 14 They shall not sell of it, neither exchange, nor alienate the first fruits of the land. View more context for this quotation 1808 Hoyle's Game of Chess 19 When you have two pawns on a front line neither should be pushed forward until the adversary proposes to exchange. 1808 Hoyle's Game of Chess 19 Strive to capture or exchange those men which would prevent it [a direct attack]. 1835 I. Taylor Spiritual Despotism ii. 30 Difficulties that may be exchanged sooner than avoided. b. With for (†with) before the thing taken in exchange. In modern use also with against (? after French contre). Also absol. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > barter > [verb (transitive)] interchangec1374 changea1382 barterc1440 corsec1440 rore1440 truckc1440 coss14.. scorse1509 chafferc1535 to chop and change1549 chop1554 cope1570 excourse1593 swap1594 coupc1610 exchange1614 to trade off1676 rap1699 dicker1864 horse-trade1924 society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [verb (transitive)] > exchange changec1400 wissel1483 rechange1551 exchange1614 1614 W. Camden Remaines (rev. ed.) 204 The King..was enforced to call in the old money..and to erect Exchanges where the weight of old money was exchanged for new. a1616 W. Shakespeare Cymbeline (1623) i. v. 55 To shift his being, Is to exchange one misery with another. View more context for this quotation 1621 H. Ainsworth Annot. Five Bks. Moses & Bk. Psalmes Gen. xxii. (heading) Isaak is exchanged with a ram. 1680 R. Morden Geogr. Rectified (1685) 77 The Commodities that the Turks exchange for with the Inhabitants are Slaves. a1704 J. Locke Two Treat. Govt. II. §46 Exchange his sheep for shells, or wool for a sparkling pebble. 1783 W. Thomson in R. Watson & W. Thomson Hist. Reign Philip III v. 314 He burned with impatience to exchange the luxury of a palace for the dangers and hardships of the field. 1833 H. Martineau Berkeley the Banker i. iv. 74 When men used to exchange wheat against bullocks. 1868 J. E. T. Rogers Man. Polit. Econ. (ed. 3) iii. 22 Where dealings are transacted on a large scale, it is not difficult for commodities to be exchanged against commodities. 1874 J. R. Green Short Hist. Eng. People iii. §3. 123 The vague expressions of the older charters were now exchanged for precise and elaborate provisions. ΚΠ 1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost iv. i. 81 What, shalt thou exchange for raggs roabes. View more context for this quotation a1599 E. Spenser Canto Mutabilitie vi. vi, in Faerie Queene (1609) sig. Hh4v Ne shee the lawes of Nature onely brake, But eke of Iustice..And death for life exchanged foolishlie. 2. To give and receive reciprocally; to make an exchange of; to interchange. Const. singular or plural object with (a person). ΘΚΠ the world > time > change > exchange > exchange, change for [verb (transitive)] > interchange changec1300 interchangec1374 exchange1604 reciprocate1611 alternatea1711 counterchange1728 1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet v. ii. 281 Exchange forgiuenesse with me noble Hamlet. View more context for this quotation a1616 W. Shakespeare Winter's Tale (1623) iv. iv. 278 She wold not exchange flesh with one that lou'd her. View more context for this quotation a1648 Ld. Herbert Life (1976) 69 Purposing to Exchange a Pistoll Shott or two with the first I mett. 1698 Mem. E. Ludlow (1721) I. 47 The great Shot was exchanged on both sides for the space of an Hour. 1711 J. Addison Spectator No. 12. ¶2 I do not remember that we have exchang'd a Word together these Five Years. 1797 A. Radcliffe Italian I. vii. 191 Would we could exchange natures with him for a moment. 1832 H. Martineau For Each & All vi. 79 They exchanged smiles, and understood one another immediately. 1846 H. H. Wilson Hist. Brit. India 1805–35 II. x. 417 No engagements of allegiance or protection had ever been exchanged. 1855 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. III. 5 Blows were exchanged. 3. Military and Navy. a. To give up a prisoner to the enemy in return for one taken by them. ΘΚΠ society > armed hostility > victory > make victorious [verb (transitive)] > exchange prisoner of war exchange1726 1726 N. Tindal tr. P. Rapin de Thoyras Hist. Eng. (ed. 2) I. 207/2 Matilda..consented he should be exchanged for the King. 1853 J. H. Stocqueler Mil. Encycl. 220/1 Prisoners of War..are deprived of their liberty until regularly exchanged. 1860 T. D. Woolsey Introd. Internat. Law §146. 336 Prisoners are generally exchanged within the same rank man for man. b. absol. To pass, by exchange with another officer, from or out of one regiment or ship into another. Cf. exchange n. 1e. ΚΠ 1787 Ld. Nelson 10 July in Dispatches & Lett. (1845) I. 243 Lieutenant Hope wished to exchange out of the Pegasus into the Boreas. 1875 Gathorne Hardy Speech House of Commons 22 Feb. A poor man may find himself in positions where he could not exchange. 1875 Trevelyan Speech House of Commons 22 Feb. The officer above them who refuses to exchange out of the battalion. 4. intransitive. Chiefly of coin: To be received as an equivalent for. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [verb (intransitive)] > exchange exchange1776 arbitrage1923 1776 A. Smith Inq. Wealth of Nations I. i. xi. 244 In 1695..the value of the silver coin was not kept up by the gold coin; a guinea then commonly exchanging for thirty shillings of the worn and clipt silver. View more context for this quotation 1848 J. S. Mill Princ. Polit. Econ. iii. iii. §2 Demand and supply always rush to an equilibrium, but the condition of stable equilibrium is when things exchange for each other according to their cost of production. 1890 Sat. Rev. 3 May 531/2 An English sovereign exchanged a little while ago for thirteen rupees. 5. transitive. = change v. 9. Also to exchange into = change v. 9d.The first quot. may belong to change v.; schaungen appears among the forms of that word in 14th cent. ΘΚΠ the world > time > change > change to something else, transformation > transform [verb (transitive)] wendOE forshapeOE workOE awendOE makec1175 turna1200 forwenda1325 change1340 shape1362 transmewc1374 transposec1380 puta1382 convertc1384 exchangea1400 remue?a1400 makea1425 reduce?a1425 removec1425 resolvea1450 transvertc1450 overchangec1480 mew1512 transmutea1513 wring1524 reduct1548 transform1556 innovate1561 metamorphose1576 transume1579 metamorphize1587 transmove1590 transchangea1599 transfashion1601 deflect1613 fordo1624 entail1628 transmutate1632 distila1637 to make much (also little, something, nothing, etc.) of1637 transqualify1652 unconvert1654 simulate1658 spend1668 transverse1687 hocus-pocus1774 mutate1796 fancy1801 to change around1871 metamorphosize1888 catalyse1944 morph1996 the mind > possession > acquisition > obtain or acquire [verb (transitive)] > obtain in return or exchange recovera1413 exchange1592 a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Gött.) l. 479 Fra þan his [sc. Lucifer's] name schangid was, Now es he cald foule sathanas. 1548 E. Gest Treat. againste Masse sig. Bviiv Can it be hys bodye, onles it be exchaunged into it? 1592 A. Day Eng. Secretorie (rev. ed.) i. sig. Y2 But..as it much differeth..from the other, is also alike exchaunged by title, that one tearmed..Friendship, and this other..loue. 1609 W. Shakespeare Sonnets cix. sig. G3v I returne againe, Iust to the time, not with the time exchang'd . View more context for this quotation This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1894; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.c1374v.a1400 |
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