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 January ['dʒænjʊ`ɛrɪ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 一月



    january
    [ noun ]
    the first month of the year; begins 10 days after the winter solstice
    <noun.time>


    January \Jan"u*a*ry\, n. [L. Januarius, fr. Janus an old Latin
    deity, the god of the sun and the year, to whom the month of
    January was sacred; cf. janua a door, Skr. y[=a] to go.]
    The first month of the year, containing thirty-one days.

    Note: Before the adoption of New Style, the commencement of
    the year was usually reckoned from March 25.

    1. Under the first civil settlement of Boesky-related cases, reached in January, the 46 investors in Boesky's partnership will receive $248 million in liquidation proceedings.
    2. From January 3 the channel will broadcast European Money Wheel, five hours of business news and information on weekday mornings.
    3. Pozsgay shot up in popular esteem last January when he became the first public leader to proclaim that the 1956 revolt was a popular uprising and not a counterrevolution, as it had officially been termed for more than 32 years.
    4. Treasury Securities Prices of U.S. Treasury securities rose as much as 1/4 point as investors and traders awaited today's January employment report.
    5. The two bills were introduced in January after a deranged drifter, Patrick Purdy, opened fire at a crowded Stockton schoolyard, killing five young students and wounding 29 others, as well as a teacher.
    6. Americans' disposable, or after-tax, incomes rose 1.7 percent in January after rising 0.9 percent in December and falling 0.3 percent in November.
    7. But they acknowledged that the fears of a weak economy that led the Fed to ease slightly in January no longer existed.
    8. The move, from January 1, was announced by President Daniel arap Moi at a rally to mark 31 years of independence from British rule.
    9. If the utility commission follows its normal schedule for public hearings, the rate change, if granted, would go into effect next January.
    10. Nevertheless, there seemed to be continuing differences, in spite of Mr Bock's boardroom shake-up in January.
    11. "We're still paying for the rally we had in January and February," said Mr. Goldman, adding that only more selling can raise cash reserves and investor pessimism enough to fuel another run higher.
    12. Platinum for January delivery settled at $578.60 an ounce, up $15.40.
    13. Mark Obrinsky, an economist with the U.S. League of Savings Institutions, said the March increase, coupled with an overall 9.6 percent jump in February, provide evidence that housing has recovered from its slump in December and January.
    14. GOVETT EMERGING Markets Investment Trust has invested 90 per cent of the proceeds of the offer of C shares and has set January 31 as the reference date for the conversion into shares and warrants.
    15. It slashed that proposal in late January to 10 cents on the dollar in cash when the airline emerges from bankruptcy protection, and another 70 percent over the following 10 years, without interest.
    16. Among active secondary issues, Government National Mortgage Association 8% securities for January delivery were up 6/32 at 100 21/32, Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp.
    17. In January, an index of 110 high-yield bonds tracked by Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. had an average spread of 4.96 percentage points above the rate of the Treasury 7% notes of 1994, which have the closest comparable maturity to that of the index.
    18. When he became chairman in January, Mr. Donaldson immediately made the listing of blue-chip foreign stocks his top priority.
    19. The fuel from the first - lower interest rates - has probably run dry, although a distressing fall in January consumer confidence earlier this week did briefly revive speculation that the Fed would ease its monetary policy one more time.
    20. Imports, at $7.48 billion, were off 0.6% from the year before but up 1.3% from January.
    21. The 40th birthday festivities kicked off at the Super Bowl in New Orleans in January with a halftime show featuring the Peanuts characters.
    22. In January 1989 Lloyds led the way and the others soon followed.
    23. GW Utilities, which has interests in oil production and transportation, paid a special dividend of C$10 a share, or C$393 million, in January following the sale of its 82% stake in Consumers Gas Ltd. to British Gas PLC.
    24. The request, by First City principals Richard Greenberg, Frederick Greenberg and Dan Quigley, was approved by the bank board in January 1985.
    25. He claimed that some of the hostages were spies for the CIA, specifically naming Terry Waite, the British envoy of the archbishop of Canterbury who disappeared in West Beirut in January 1987.
    26. But according to the latest Gallup-Newsweek poll, Bush's approval rate has slipped from 80 percent last January to 48 percent, the lowest rating of his presidency.
    27. Ramp season opens in late winter, but this year started in January because of warm weather.
    28. When the company offered cash-back deals on the vehicles last December and January, sales soared.
    29. Building permits, considered a good sign of future activity, fell 8.2 percent in January to an annual rate of 1.25 million units, the lowest level for permits since January 1985.
    30. Building permits, considered a good sign of future activity, fell 8.2 percent in January to an annual rate of 1.25 million units, the lowest level for permits since January 1985.
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