释义 |
Definition of lucrative in English: lucrativeadjective ˈluːkrətɪvˈlukrədɪv Producing a great deal of profit. a lucrative career as a stand-up comedian Example sentencesExamples - Her trip to Milan has been extremely lucrative for her budding career.
- With a combined turnover of £20 million, it's a lucrative business.
- In their short period of operation, the Detroit casinos have proved extremely lucrative.
- Even though film and television are more lucrative in terms of remuneration, theatre offers a true spiritual experience.
- Her parents are still married but heavily focused on their lucrative careers.
- Does this look like a newspaper that has made hundreds of millions out of a highly lucrative share offer?
- Now, they worry about damage to the celebrity profiles that make their careers so lucrative.
- There was a modern building to move into and lucrative development grants.
- Tariffs make it lucrative for Europe and America to process coffee instead.
- The company claims it has received a lucrative offer from the South Australian government.
- As in the United States, gambling in Canada is hugely lucrative big business.
- He urged companies in Essex to get their share of a potentially lucrative market.
- Instead, he became more famous for crashing his Porsche and signing the world's most lucrative contract.
- Looking forward, Croatia could be a potentially lucrative market for political consultants.
- Curtailing all shopping and financially lucrative opportunities would be obviously counterproductive.
- The market is lucrative: a pack of 200 cigarettes sells for €52.
- He now uses his luck to run a casino, a venture that has proven very lucrative.
- There was more money in the game thanks to lucrative television contracts.
- To be sure, class-action law can be a highly lucrative business.
- But today the genre stands as a lucrative niche in an otherwise struggling fiction industry.
Synonyms profitable, profit-making, gainful, remunerative, moneymaking, paying, high-income, well paid, high-paying, bankable, cost-effective productive, fruitful, rewarding, worthwhile, advantageous thriving, flourishing, successful, booming, going
Origin Late Middle English: from Latin lucrativus, from lucrat- 'gained', from the verb lucrari, from lucrum (see lucre). Definition of lucrative in US English: lucrativeadjectiveˈlo͞okrədivˈlukrədɪv Producing a great deal of profit. a lucrative career as a stand-up comedian Example sentencesExamples - With a combined turnover of £20 million, it's a lucrative business.
- Her parents are still married but heavily focused on their lucrative careers.
- The company claims it has received a lucrative offer from the South Australian government.
- As in the United States, gambling in Canada is hugely lucrative big business.
- Now, they worry about damage to the celebrity profiles that make their careers so lucrative.
- Does this look like a newspaper that has made hundreds of millions out of a highly lucrative share offer?
- Looking forward, Croatia could be a potentially lucrative market for political consultants.
- Curtailing all shopping and financially lucrative opportunities would be obviously counterproductive.
- Even though film and television are more lucrative in terms of remuneration, theatre offers a true spiritual experience.
- Tariffs make it lucrative for Europe and America to process coffee instead.
- The market is lucrative: a pack of 200 cigarettes sells for €52.
- There was more money in the game thanks to lucrative television contracts.
- To be sure, class-action law can be a highly lucrative business.
- He urged companies in Essex to get their share of a potentially lucrative market.
- He now uses his luck to run a casino, a venture that has proven very lucrative.
- Instead, he became more famous for crashing his Porsche and signing the world's most lucrative contract.
- There was a modern building to move into and lucrative development grants.
- In their short period of operation, the Detroit casinos have proved extremely lucrative.
- Her trip to Milan has been extremely lucrative for her budding career.
- But today the genre stands as a lucrative niche in an otherwise struggling fiction industry.
Synonyms profitable, profit-making, gainful, remunerative, moneymaking, paying, high-income, well paid, high-paying, bankable, cost-effective
Origin Late Middle English: from Latin lucrativus, from lucrat- ‘gained’, from the verb lucrari, from lucrum (see lucre). |