bags币,bag,sack,handbag,purse有什么区别求答案

1、bag : 指一般的口袋bags币,有时也指手提包

2、sack : 应用较窄,指较大的袋子,如麻袋等

3、handbag : 指手提包,尤指女人用的手提包

4、purse:特指女用小钱包,小钱袋

1、bag : 英 [baɡ]  美 [bæɡ]

[ 词源 ]Middle English: perhaps from Old Norse baggi.

2、sack : 英 [sak]  美 [sæk]

[ 词源 ]Old English sacc, from Latin saccus ‘sack, sackcloth', from Greek sakkos, of Semitic origin. Sense 1 of the verb dates from the mid 19th cent.

3、handbag : 英 [ˈhan(d)baɡ]  美 [ˈhæn(d)ˌbæɡ] 

[ 词源 ]生造词

4、purse:英 [pəːs]  美 [pərs]

[ 词源 ]late Old English, alteration of late Latin bursa ‘purse', from Greek bursa ‘hide, leather'. The current verb sense (from the notion of drawing purse strings) dates from the early 17th cent.

1.bag : 普通用词,指一般的口袋,有时也指手提包。 例如:The bag of this style is the most fashionable in this season.(这是本季最流行的一款包。) 2.sack : 应用较窄,指较大的袋子,如麻袋等。 例如:Coal used to cost 3 shillings a sack.(以往一袋煤值三先令。) 3.handbag : 指手提包,尤指女人用的手提包。 例如:Helen found a handbag with a lot of money in it at the railway station.(海伦在火车站拾到一个手提包, 里面装有很多钱。

The History of Money

Money is anything that is commonly accepted by a group of people for the exchange of goods, services, or resources. Every country has its own system of coins and paper money.

Bartering and Commodity Money

In the beginning, people bartered. Barter is the exchange of a good or service for another good or service, a bag of rice for a bag of beans. However, what if you couldn't agree what something was worth in exchange or you didn't want what the other person had. To solve that problem humans developed what is called commodity money.

A commodity is a basic item used by almost everyone. In the past, salt, tea, tobacco, cattle and seeds were commodities and therefore were once used as money. However, using commodities as money had other problems. Carrying bags of salt and other commodities was hard, and commodities were difficult to store or were perishable.

Coins and Paper Money

Metals objects were introduced as money around 5000 B.C. By 700 BC, the Lydians became the first in the Western world to make coins. Countries were soon minting their own series of coins with specific values. Metal was used because it was readily available, easy to work with and could be recycled. Since coins were given a certain value, it became easier to compare the cost of items people wanted.

Some of the earliest known paper money dates back to China, where the issue of paper money became common from about AD 960 onwards.

Representative Money

With the introduction of paper currency and non-precious coinage, commodity money evolved into representative money. This meant that what money itself was made of no longer had to be very valuable.

Representative money was backed by a government or bank's promise to exchange it for a certain amount of silver or gold. For example, the old British Pound bill or Pound Sterling was once guaranteed to be redeemable for a pound of sterling silver.

For most of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the majority of currencies were based on representative money through the use of the gold standard.

Fiat Money

Representative money has now been replaced by fiat money. Fiat is the Latin word for "let it be done". Money is now given value by a government fiat or decree, in other words enforceable legal tender laws were made. By law the refusal of "legal tender" money in favor of some other form of payment is illegal.

$$$

The origin of the "$" money sign is not certain. Many historians trace the $ money sign to either the Mexican or Spanish "P's" for pesos, or piastres, or pieces of eight. The study of old manuscripts shows that the "S," gradually came to be written over the "P," looking very much like the "$" mark.

U.S. Money Trivia

On March 10, 1862 the first United States paper money was issued. The denominations were $5, $10, and $20. They became legal tender by Act of March 17, 1862. The inclusion of "In God We Trust" on all currency was required by law in 1955. The national motto first appeared on paper money in 1957 on $1 Silver Certificates, and on all Federal Reserve Notes beginning with Series 1963.

Electronic Banking

ERMA began as a project for the Bank of America in an effort to computerize the banking industry. MICR (magnetic ink character recognition) was part of ERMA. MICR allowed computers to read special numbers at the bottom of checks that allowed computerized tracking and accounting of check transactions.

2022-06-11

2022-06-11