释义 |
tycoon
ty·coon T0443300 (tī-ko͞on′)n.1. A wealthy and powerful businessperson or industrialist; a magnate.2. Used formerly as a title for a Japanese shogun. [Japanese taikun, title of a shogun, Middle Chinese tɦaj` kyn, great prince : tɦaj` kyn, great (also the source of Mandarin dà) + kyn, prince (also the source of Mandarin jūn).]Word History: In 1853, Commodore Matthew C. Perry sailed into a harbor near Tokyo and presented a letter from the American president Millard Fillmore demanding that Japan open itself to trade with the United States. At the time, the Japanese restricted foreign trade severely. Among Western nations, for example, only the Dutch were allowed to trade in Japan, and then only on a small island in the harbor of Nagasaki. This policy had been put in place in the 1630s by the shogun (as the rulers of premodern Japan were called). In late medieval times, the Japanese emperor had been reduced to a figurehead, and all real power belonged to the shogun, who ruled on the emperor's behalf. On the date of Perry's visit, the Tokugawa family had held the shogunate for 250 years, as a kind of hereditary monarchy. Although Perry believed that he was dealing with emissaries from the emperor, nominally the ruler of the land, in fact he met the representatives of the shogun. The emissaries spoke of the shogun as the taikun, using a title of Chinese origin that literally means "great prince." This title was used by Japanese officials in foreign relations because tennō, "emporer," was obviously unavailable—the shogun ruled the Empire of Japan in the emperor's name. The title shōgun itself was probably not considered grand enough, as it literally means just "general of the army." Accounts of Perry's visit made the shogun's title taikun well-known back in the United States as tycoon, and Abraham Lincoln's cabinet members took up tycoon as an affectionate nickname for the president. The word soon came to be used for business and industry leaders in general—at times being applied to figures like J.P. Morgan, who may indeed have wielded more power than many princes and presidents.tycoon (taɪˈkuːn) n1. (Commerce) a business man of great wealth and power2. (Historical Terms) an archaic name for a shogun[C19: from Japanese taikun, from Chinese ta great + chün ruler]ty•coon (taɪˈkun) n. 1. a wealthy and powerful businessperson; magnate. 2. a title used by foreigners to refer to the Japanese shogun. [1855–60; < Japanese taikun < Middle Chinese, = Chinese dà great + jūn prince] tycoon - Comes from Japanese tai, "great," and kun, "prince, lord," from Chinese da, "great," and jun, "prince, ruler."See also related terms for prince.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | tycoon - a very wealthy or powerful businessman; "an oil baron"big businessman, business leader, magnate, top executive, baron, mogul, king, powerbusinessman, man of affairs - a person engaged in commercial or industrial business (especially an owner or executive)oil tycoon - a powerful person in the oil business |
tycoonnoun magnate, capitalist, baron, industrialist, financier, fat cat (slang, chiefly U.S.), mogul, captain of industry, potentate, wealthy businessman, big cheese (slang, old-fashioned), plutocrat, big noise (informal), merchant prince a self-made property tycoonTranslationstycoon (taiˈkuːn) noun a rich and powerful businessman. an oil tycoon. (企業、政界的)巨頭 (企业、政界的)巨头 tycoon
tycoon1. a business man of great wealth and power 2. an archaic name for a shogunTycoon
TycoonA very wealthy businessperson, especially one who made his/her fortune in a single industry. For example, one may be called an oil tycoon or a steel tycoon.tycoon
Synonyms for tycoonnoun magnateSynonyms- magnate
- capitalist
- baron
- industrialist
- financier
- fat cat
- mogul
- captain of industry
- potentate
- wealthy businessman
- big cheese
- plutocrat
- big noise
- merchant prince
Synonyms for tycoonnoun a very wealthy or powerful businessmanSynonyms- big businessman
- business leader
- magnate
- top executive
- baron
- mogul
- king
- power
Related Words- businessman
- man of affairs
- oil tycoon
|