请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 Ricardian
释义

Ricardian1

adjective rɪˈkɑːdiənriˈkärdēən
  • 1Relating to the time of any of three kings of England, Richard I, II, and III.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The massive bronze statue of Richard in Westminster Palace Yard captures superbly the Ricardian qualities admired for centuries.
    1. 1.1 Of or holding the view that Richard III was a just king who was misrepresented by Shakespeare and other writers.
noun rɪˈkɑːdiənriˈkärdēən
  • A contemporary or supporter of Richard III.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Dean of Westminster has consistently turned down applications for the urn to be re-opened but the Ricardians hope for different response now.
    • The danger from such ‘Ricardians ' led to Richard's own mysterious death in Pontefract Castle soon afterwards.
    • Who better to whet the biographical appetite than the Shakespearean villain metamorphosed as hero by devoted ‘Ricardians’?
    • An even more striking case was that of Maud Ufford, the dowager Countess of Oxford, a devoted Ricardian who orchestrated opposition to Henry IV in Essex in 1403-4.

Derivatives

  • Ricardianism

  • noun
    • As historian Barry Gordon has pointed out, there is a lively opposition to Say's Law and the rule of Ricardianism in the economic press throughout the early and mid-nineteenth century.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • As Hilton points out, the posing of this question marks the end merely of the sway of Ricardianism in such technical economic questions as value, rent, and wages.

Origin

From medieval Latin Ricardus 'Richard' + -ian.

Ricardian2

adjective rɪˈkɑːdiənriˈkärdēən
  • Relating to or denoting the doctrines of the political economist David Ricardo (1772–1823).

    Example sentencesExamples
    • But W-R-C reject this objection by breaking away from the classical Ricardian approach which postulates pregiven labour value from the physical production process.
    • The Ricardian prediction that international trade would induce a diversified specialisation in certain products has been used to show that developing countries would become cheap raw material suppliers.
    • Having discovered the origin of surplus value Marx was able to resolve one of the major problems upon which the Ricardian school had stumbled.
    • The world is flat, and it helps to understand the Ricardian specialization at play, and how clusters of capabilities are not only a natural, but a good thing.
    • Moffat is not at all comfortable with George's explanation of the source of and rationale for interest, and he is even more disturbed with his unqualified acceptance of the Ricardian rent concept.
    • Mair and Damania found, however, in his Official Papers by Alfred Marshall evidence that he supported the Ricardian capital-in-general conclusion.
    • Moffat's repudiation of Ricardian principles extends, of course, to the Ricardian rent concept.
    • The bulk of the space is devoted to the rapidly expanding evidentiary base and to the discussion of ways in which markets and technology could overcome Malthusian, Ricardian, and Marxist constraints on economic development.
    • Their paper argues that the correct attribution should be to Ricardo, with Marshall bringing forward in time the Ricardian tax incidence doctrine.
    • That is, the landlord's motive became not simply to increase his rents to collect his Ricardian surplus, nor simply to get increased rents through immediate increases in productivity.
    • Alien finds that landlords generally collected Ricardian rent from enclosed farmers.
    • These furs he shipped to London, returning with more musical instruments, in a scenario that seems a textbook example of Ricardian trade according to comparative advantage, as indeed do most of Astor's money making endeavors.
    • Although Stigler had no quarrel with the interpretation of Ricardian economics offered in such accounts, this left, as he pointed out to me, the obvious problem: Why did it ever succeed?
    • Carey was a critic of the deductive method of analysis and the Ricardian rent theory in particular.
    • I critically examine the Ricardian theory of rent in a later section.
    • In his eyes George is a more faithful developer of Ricardian economics than even J. S. Mill.
    • Malthus's elaboration of this central concept throughout his career, his insistence on the importance of demand in the determination of value, separates him from the mainstream of Ricardian thought and its labor theory of value.
    • Second, on an analytical level, George apparently never realized that there are really two Ricardian rent theories - one for the extensive margin and one for the intensive margin.
    • In all cases, the equity and financial case for land-value taxation must be juxtaposed to other considerations, however compelling the logic of Ricardian rent theory, and it is very compelling indeed.
    • Patrick O'Brien defends British monetary policy against its bullionist and Ricardian critics.
noun rɪˈkɑːdiənriˈkärdēən
  • An adherent of the theories of David Ricardo.

 
 

Ricardian1

adjectiveriˈkärdēən
  • 1Relating to the time of any of three kings of England, Richard I, II, and III.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The massive bronze statue of Richard in Westminster Palace Yard captures superbly the Ricardian qualities admired for centuries.
    1. 1.1 Of or holding the view that Richard III was a just king who was misrepresented by Shakespeare and other writers.
nounriˈkärdēən
  • A contemporary or supporter of Richard III.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Dean of Westminster has consistently turned down applications for the urn to be re-opened but the Ricardians hope for different response now.
    • The danger from such ‘Ricardians ' led to Richard's own mysterious death in Pontefract Castle soon afterwards.
    • Who better to whet the biographical appetite than the Shakespearean villain metamorphosed as hero by devoted ‘Ricardians’?
    • An even more striking case was that of Maud Ufford, the dowager Countess of Oxford, a devoted Ricardian who orchestrated opposition to Henry IV in Essex in 1403-4.

Origin

From medieval Latin Ricardus ‘Richard’ + -ian.

Ricardian2

adjectiveriˈkärdēən
  • Relating to or denoting the doctrines of the political economist David Ricardo (1772–1823).

    Example sentencesExamples
    • These furs he shipped to London, returning with more musical instruments, in a scenario that seems a textbook example of Ricardian trade according to comparative advantage, as indeed do most of Astor's money making endeavors.
    • Carey was a critic of the deductive method of analysis and the Ricardian rent theory in particular.
    • Although Stigler had no quarrel with the interpretation of Ricardian economics offered in such accounts, this left, as he pointed out to me, the obvious problem: Why did it ever succeed?
    • Their paper argues that the correct attribution should be to Ricardo, with Marshall bringing forward in time the Ricardian tax incidence doctrine.
    • The world is flat, and it helps to understand the Ricardian specialization at play, and how clusters of capabilities are not only a natural, but a good thing.
    • In his eyes George is a more faithful developer of Ricardian economics than even J. S. Mill.
    • The Ricardian prediction that international trade would induce a diversified specialisation in certain products has been used to show that developing countries would become cheap raw material suppliers.
    • Second, on an analytical level, George apparently never realized that there are really two Ricardian rent theories - one for the extensive margin and one for the intensive margin.
    • I critically examine the Ricardian theory of rent in a later section.
    • Moffat's repudiation of Ricardian principles extends, of course, to the Ricardian rent concept.
    • The bulk of the space is devoted to the rapidly expanding evidentiary base and to the discussion of ways in which markets and technology could overcome Malthusian, Ricardian, and Marxist constraints on economic development.
    • That is, the landlord's motive became not simply to increase his rents to collect his Ricardian surplus, nor simply to get increased rents through immediate increases in productivity.
    • Malthus's elaboration of this central concept throughout his career, his insistence on the importance of demand in the determination of value, separates him from the mainstream of Ricardian thought and its labor theory of value.
    • In all cases, the equity and financial case for land-value taxation must be juxtaposed to other considerations, however compelling the logic of Ricardian rent theory, and it is very compelling indeed.
    • Patrick O'Brien defends British monetary policy against its bullionist and Ricardian critics.
    • But W-R-C reject this objection by breaking away from the classical Ricardian approach which postulates pregiven labour value from the physical production process.
    • Moffat is not at all comfortable with George's explanation of the source of and rationale for interest, and he is even more disturbed with his unqualified acceptance of the Ricardian rent concept.
    • Having discovered the origin of surplus value Marx was able to resolve one of the major problems upon which the Ricardian school had stumbled.
    • Mair and Damania found, however, in his Official Papers by Alfred Marshall evidence that he supported the Ricardian capital-in-general conclusion.
    • Alien finds that landlords generally collected Ricardian rent from enclosed farmers.
nounriˈkärdēən
  • An adherent of the theories of David Ricardo.

 
 
随便看

 

英语词典包含464360条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/1/9 19:54:34