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 exchequer [ɪks'tʃɛkɚ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. (英国)财政部, 国库

[法] 国库, 财源, 财政法院


  1. The Chancellor of the Exchequer is the minister in charge of finance in Britain.
    英国财政大臣是负责财政的大臣。
  2. The Chancellor of the Exchequer is expected to announce tax cuts in this year's budget.
    人们期望财政大臣公布在本年度预算中削减税收。
  3. The Chancellor of the Exchequer doesn't only have to convince the cabinet that his budget is sound, he has to convince the gnomes of Zurich.
    财政大臣不但得要全体内阁确信他的预算是合理的,他还得使苏黎世的银行家们信服。


exchequer
[ noun ]
the funds of a government or institution or individual
<noun.possession>


Exchequer \Ex*cheq"uer\, n. [OE. escheker, OF. eichekier, fr.
LL. scaccarium. See {Checker}, {Chess}, {Check}.]
1. One of the superior courts of law; -- so called from a
checkered cloth, which covers, or formerly covered, the
table. [Eng.]

Note: The exchequer was a court of law and equity. In the
revenue department, it had jurisdiction over the
proprietary rights of the crown against subjects; in
the common law department, it administered justice in
personal actions between subject and subject. A person
proceeding against another in the revenue department
was said to exchequer him. The judges of this court
were one chief and four puisne barons, so styled. The
Court of Exchequer Chamber sat as court of error in
which the judgments of each of the superior courts of
common law, in England, were subject to revision by the
judges of the other two sitting collectively. Causes
involving difficult questions of law were sometimes
after argument, adjourned into this court from the
other courts, for debate before judgment in the court
below. Recent legislation in England (1880) has
abolished the Court of Exchequer and the Court of
Exchequer Chamber, as distinct tribunals, a single
board of judiciary, the High Court of Justice, being
established for the trial of all classes of civil
cases. --Wharton.

2. The department of state having charge of the collection
and management of the royal revenue. [Eng.] Hence, the
treasury; and, colloquially, pecuniary possessions in
general; as, the company's exchequer is low.

{Barons of the exchequer}. See under {Baron}.

{Chancellor of the exchequer}. See under {Chancellor}.

{Exchequer bills} or {Exchequer bonds} (Eng.), bills of
money, or promissory bills, issued from the exchequer by
authority of Parliament; a species of paper currency
emitted under the authority of the government, and bearing
interest.


Exchequer \Ex*cheq"uer\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Exchequered}; p.
pr. & vb. n. {Exchequering}.]
To institute a process against (any one) in the Court of
Exchequer.

  1. The chancellor of the exchequer does it; industrial leaders do it; even striking signalmen do it.
  2. Mr Kenneth Clarke, UK chancellor of the exchequer, said yesterday that he had seen no further evidence of domestic inflation since his last meeting with the Governor of the Bank of England.
  3. The new chancellor of the exchequer, John Major, was named to the post Thursday night after Nigel Lawson abruptly resigned, saying he could not continue to serve as long as Mrs. Thatcher retained Sir Alan Walters as her economic advisor.
  4. Why is a British chancellor of the exchequer proposing to freeze the tax on beer but remove another slice of the tax subsidies on housing?
  5. Denis Healey, the chancellor of the exchequer, acquiesced; this was, he thought, a particularly clever expedient.
  6. It shifted down to Pounds 700m later, the bulk of it representing exchequer transactions.
  7. Combining social security benefits and taxes forgone, the cost of unemployment to the exchequer is put at Pounds 26bn per year, or more than Pounds 9,000 per unemployed person.
  8. It has shown itself resolutely determined to persist with a structure in which there are at most two votes that matter, those of the chancellor of the exchequer and the prime minister.
  9. The market will focus on tomorrow's speech at the Conservative party conference by Mr Norman Lamont, the chancellor of the exchequer.
  10. Is it to be Kenneth Clarke in the 1990s? In each of the three previous decades, a Conservative chancellor of the exchequer has inherited an economy suffering from high unemployment.
  11. The most illustrious recruit is the Bank of England - a contract agreed before last October, Mr Norman Lamont, the UK chancellor of the exchequer, might care to note.
  12. Just this week, Britain's chancellor of the exchequer, Nigel Lawson, urged the Germans to "show more obvious awareness" of the dangers of a tight monetary policy.
  13. Robust economic growth and a solid government surplus were enviable accomplishments for Mr. Lawson, the chancellor of the exchequer.
  14. To tax or not to tax - that, according to most economic commentators, is the dilemma facing Britain's chancellor of the exchequer in his Budget.
  15. Major's salary as Prime Minister will be $131,700, up from the $108,800 he received as chancellor of the exchequer.
  16. But the exchequer is suffering from wilting tax receipts during the worst recession since the second world war. 'We don't know exactly what the ministry is going to do,' says Ms Teruko Onoda, drugs analyst at Merrill Lynch, says.
  17. Mr Rupert Murdoch, proprietor, was absent from this little gallery. The chancellor of the exchequer, who earns about a tenth of a Newmarch, disapproves of some of the large executive salaries paid by British companies.
  18. Britain's chancellor of the exchequer, Nigel Lawson, said the country's trade deficit isn't of any immediate concern and reaffirmed the Conservative government's determination to fight inflation as the center of its economic policy.
  19. But the two issues are intertwined. It was in his 1988 Budget that Mr Nigel Lawson, then chancellor of the exchequer, announced the replacement of tax incentives for planting trees with grants.
  20. Ralegh nourished a lifelong dream of El Dorado, from where he believed endless amounts of gold would accrue to his own capacious pocket and the royal exchequer.
  21. But an auction to determine which company or consortium required the smallest government grant to undertake the project could get the line built at least cost to the exchequer. The idea is not a panacea.
  22. On Monday afternoon, the British underwriters delivered a letter to the chancellor of the exchequer's office seeking cancellation or postponement of the offer.
  23. While the nation rests, Britain's chancellor of the exchequer will be back at work on Wednesday, holding his regular monthly monetary policy meeting with the governor of the Bank of England.
  24. It still leaves a 'horror scenario' of an intractable structural budget deficit from 1995, when the full burden of borrowing to finance unification will fall on the central exchequer, he says.
  25. It sounds as if chancellor of the exchequer Norman Lamont is not the only member of the government who may be living beyond his means.
  26. However, Her Majesty's man in Madrid knows how to put people down and Bossano was not invited to Monday night's bash in honour of Kenneth Clarke, Britain's chancellor of the exchequer.
  27. Among a number of imaginative fiscal policy reforms is this year's multi-stage Budget. Above all, when Mr Lamont became chancellor of the exchequer underlying inflation was running at an annual rate of 8 per cent.
  28. Unemployment has risen to 2.9m in the course of the year. Some people have retained their jobs, despite all the odds: the chancellor of the exchequer, for example.
  29. Britain's chancellor of the exchequer, Nigel Lawson, said the ministers held "a full discussion of the circumstances under which we would engage in intervention," and had "privately agreed" on some guidelines and procedures.
  30. But hopes of 'decoupling' European rates depended on members states putting their own economic house in order. Mr Kenneth Clarke, UK chancellor of the exchequer, expressed satisfaction with the drift of debate on monetary union.
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