nominal
柯林斯词典
1. ADJ You use nominal to indicate that someone or something is supposed to have a particular identity or status, but in reality does not have it. 名义上的
As he was still not allowed to run a company, his wife became its nominal head. 由于他仍未获准管理公司,他的妻子就成了公司名义上的老板。
2. nominallyADV 在名义上
The sultan was still nominally the chief of staff. 苏丹在名义上仍是军队领导人。
The road is nominally under the control of UN peacekeeping troops. 那条路名义上是在联合国维和部队的控制之下。
3. ADJ A nominal price or sum of money is very small in comparison with the real cost or value of the thing that is being bought or sold. (价格、金额) 象征性的[ADJ n]
I am prepared to sell my shares at a nominal price. 我准备以低价卖掉我的股票。
4. ADJ In economics, the nominal value, rate, or level of something is the one expressed in terms of current prices or figures, without taking into account general changes in prices that take place over time. 票面上的[ADJ n]
Inflation would be lower and so nominal rates would be more attractive in real terms. 通货膨胀将要降低,所以名义汇率实际上会更有吸引力。
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nominal /ˈnɒmɪnəl/
剑桥词典
nominal adjective (NOT REALLY)
in name or thought but not in fact or not as things really are
名义上的;有名无实的
She's the nominal head of our college - the real work is done by her deputy . 她名义上是我们学院的校长——实际工作都是由她的副手来完成的。
nominal adjective (SMALL)
A nominal amount of money is very small compared to an expected price or value .
(金额)微不足道的,象征性的
a nominal sum /charge 象征性的一笔款项/一点费用
For a nominal fee , they will deliver orders to customers ' homes . 他们只象征性地收点费用就可以送货上门。
nominal adjective (GRAMMAR)
language specializedrelating to a noun
和名词有关的 返回 nominal