释义 |
Definition of co-founder in English: co-foundernounkəʊˈfaʊndə A joint founder. Example sentencesExamples - The co-founders of this Internet company founded the business in 1996 and floated in on the stock market in February 2000.
- The co-founders and four other employees put in more than $100,000.
- She was also one of the co-founders of the recently formed Harvard Club of Bulgaria, a group which is resolved to play an active role in the country's business and political life.
- My ‘non-joining’ philosophy even extended to the Congress for Cultural Freedom of which McAuley was one of the co-founders in Australia.
- After days of cleaning up and putting away, my co-founders and I left with exactly what many founders of failed start-ups leave with: nothing more than the experience.
- They are professors of medicine at Harvard University and co-founders of Physicians for a National Health Program.
- He was scrupulous about listing himself as a co-founder of Greenpeace and was cagey about how many co-founders there were.
- She was one of the original 11 co-founders of the magazine.
- The editors and co-founders said the new publication was about giving talented writers somewhere to showcase their wares.
- The trio before me represents three of the four co-founders of the theatre group, an ensemble in the midst of preparing for their second production.
- Making clear they ‘do not promote the illegal use of drugs’ the six co-founders are looking to open a forum for debate on the issue under the banner ‘no victim, no crime’.
- The search engine relies on its own brainstorming list to keep innovation at the top of the firm's agenda, its co-founders said.
- I read your interview with the co-founder of the animal rights group and I must say I never liked this organization.
- The exhibit is called ‘This Is New York,’ and joining us now here in Washington are its two co-founders.
- Back in 1996, the co-founders always wanted to have a weekly session, while coincidentally, Maclean wanted to try his hand at a few students.
- The organization suffered even more when its co-founders acknowledged that they had failed to convert and were in love with each other.
- Speaking to one of the company's co-founders, he nails its success down to a group of similarly-minded people who are very different performers from varying backgrounds.
- The One Nation co-founders have won their bid to get out of jail, after successfully overturning their convictions and their three-year sentences for electoral fraud.
- Controversy is not something he and his co-founders shy away from.
- Google isn't conventional and neither are its co-founders.
Derivatives verb [with object]Found (an institution or organization) jointly. he helped co-found the studio with former colleagues Example sentencesExamples - After co-founding the international non-profit group which brings high-tech volunteers to the developing world, she decided to focus her energies on her music.
- In 1990, she co-founded the Dublin Self Advocacy Group to campaign for the rights of people with learning difficulties.
- She followed this triumph by co-founding the Women's Medical College in a residential area of Toronto the same year her daughter graduated.
|