Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun The currency system of China.
- noun The yuan.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun The official
currency of thePeople's Republic of China
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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It has constantly and publicly taken a harder line in arguing that the value of the renminbi is just right, as opposed to the Central Bank, which has pushed for an appreciation.
As U.S pushes China on currency, small manufacturers say they're already hurting Keith B. Richburg 2010
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The Chinese renminbi is widely considered by economists to be undervalued - perhaps by as much as 40 percent, representing a hefty subsidy for Chinese exports.
House slaps China on currency policy, deepening trade dispute Howard Schneider 2010
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The Chinese renminbi is widely considered by economists to be undervalued - perhaps by as much as 40 percent, representing a hefty subsidy for Chinese exports.
House slaps China on currency policy, deepening trade dispute Howard Schneider 2010
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It has constantly and publicly taken a harder line in arguing that the value of the renminbi is just right, as opposed to the Central Bank, which has pushed for an appreciation.
As U.S pushes China on currency, small manufacturers say they're already hurting Keith B. Richburg 2010
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“The heightened monetary sterilisation operations suggest that appreciation pressure on the renminbi is intensifying.” —
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The Chinese renminbi is widely considered by economists to be undervalued - perhaps by as much as 40 percent, representing a hefty subsidy for Chinese exports.
House slaps China on currency policy, deepening trade dispute Howard Schneider 2010
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OTOH, the Dollar has been weak and the renminbi is not propely traded.
Energy Price Outlook, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty 2009
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The Chinese renminbi is widely considered to be held below its true market value, but officials in Beijing have only committed to a gradual rise - and say that loose U.S. monetary policy is as much to blame for any distortions in the world economy.
Industrialized nations pursue currency compromise Howard Schneider 2010
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It has constantly and publicly taken a harder line in arguing that the value of the renminbi is just right, as opposed to the Central Bank, which has pushed for an appreciation.
As U.S pushes China on currency, small manufacturers say they're already hurting Keith B. Richburg 2010
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Economists and currency-market participants increasingly expect that China will at some point this year allow its currency, which is formally known as the renminbi, to rise against the U.S. dollar.
Zhou Signals Yuan Policy Shift Andrew Batson 2010
qroqqa commented on the word renminbi
The Chinese currency: unusual in that (like 'sterling') it names the currency itself but not (strictly) the principal unit, which is the yuan (colloquially kuai).
(A sentence with three sets of brackets in it must need repair, but that sounds like hard work.)
August 19, 2008