释义 |
proxy1 nounproxy2 adjective proxyprox‧y1 /ˈprɒksi $ ˈprɑːksi/ noun (plural proxies)  proxyOrigin: 1400-1500 Anglo-French procuracie, from Latin procuratio, from procurare; ➔ PROCURE - A proxy need not be a member of the Company.
- However, when spot volatility was used as the proxy, there was some evidence of a maturity effect.
- If you specify this machine's address as your proxy server, it should make browsing faster.
- My stepmother was an agent of emotional estrangement, of war by proxy, combat by youth, and chronic discipline.
- Prior to each annual meeting at which directors are elected, current management solicits the voting proxies of the stockholders.
- Some academics have spent years squirrelling around for proxies for gun ownership in given geographical areas.
- The proxy must be in a position to filter dangerous URLs and malformed commands.
NOUN► vote· Those proxy votes must be used in support of incumbent management unless the shareholder specifically instructs the bank otherwise.· A proxy vote on the two offers is expected in February at the earliest. VERB► use· However, when spot volatility was used as the proxy, there was some evidence of a maturity effect.· In the usual case, all clients within a given subnet use the same proxy.· Second, mortality rates have sometimes been used as a proxy for morbidity rates.· Inevitably we are moved in the direction of using proxies which can not properly be validated.· The 90 day treasury bill rate was used as a proxy for the risk-free rate of interest. 1by proxy if you do something by proxy, you arrange for someone else to do it for you: You can vote by proxy.2[countable, uncountable] someone who you choose to represent you, especially to vote for youproxy for a husband acting as proxy for his wife3[countable + for] formal something used to represent something else that you want to measure |