释义 |
pesope‧so /ˈpeɪsəʊ $ -soʊ/ noun (plural pesos) [countable] pesoOrigin: 1500-1600 Spanish, Latin pensum ‘weight’ - A large real depreciation of the peso has also helped, boosting exports in 1995 by over 30 percent in dollar terms.
- All I took was the three pesos for the room.
- Anyway, in the end I made 1,800 pesos on the funeral.
- At the same time the peso was devalued by 600 % and inflation soared over consumers' purchasing power declined.
- Others withdrew billions more, driving down the peso in a speculative panic.
- Shares of Telmex were down 0.50 percent to 16.02 pesos.
- The cost of servicing these liabilities would soar if the peso were devalued.
- Try to pay in pesos, because ticket sellers, like everyone else, usually set an unfair exchange rate for dollars.
NOUN► devaluation· Then came the sudden peso devaluation that December, and Jimenez pulled out $ 70 million more. the standard unit of money in the Philippines and in various Latin American countries including Mexico, Cuba, and Colombia |