interest

interest
['ɪntrɪst] 1. n
1) [u/s] (in subject, idea, person) 兴趣 [xìngqù]

There has been a lively interest in the elections. — 大家对选举兴致颇高。

2) c (pastime, hobby) 爱好 [àihào]

His interests include cooking and photography. — 他的爱好包括烹调和摄影。

3) c (advantage, profit) 利益 [lìyì]

They would protect the interests of their members. — 他们将保护成员的利益。

4) u (on loan, savings) 利息 [lìxī]

Does your current account pay interest? — 你的活期存款账户付利息吗?

the interest you pay on your mortgage — 你付贷款的利息

2. interests; n pl; (COMM)
(in a company) 股权 [gǔquán]

Her business interests include a theme park. — 她的公司股权包括一个主题公园。

3. vt
[+ work, subject, idea] 使感兴趣 [shǐ gǎnxìngqù]

These are the stories that interest me. — 这些是使我感兴趣的故事。

* to take an interest in sth/sb — 对某事/某人感兴趣

* to show an interest in sth/sb — 显露对某事/某人的兴趣

* to lose interest (in sth/sb) — 对(某事/某人)失去兴趣

* controlling interest — (COMM) 控股权益

* to be in sb's interests — 对某人有益

* in the interests of stability/security — 为稳定/安全起见

* to interest sb in sth — 使某人对某事发生兴趣


English-Chinese new dictionary. 2014.

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  • interest — in·ter·est / in trəst; in tə rəst, ˌrest/ n [probably alteration of earlier interesse, from Anglo French, from Medieval Latin, from Latin, to be between, make a difference, concern, from inter between, among + esse to be] 1: a right, title, claim …   Law dictionary

  • interest — INTEREST. s. m. Ce qui importe, ce qui convient en quelque maniere que ce soit, ou à l honneur, ou à l utilité, ou à la satisfaction de quelqu un. Interest public, general, commun. interest de famille. interest particulier. interest d honneur.… …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • Interest — In ter*est, n. [OF. interest, F. int[ e]r[^e]t, fr. L. interest it interests, is of interest, fr. interesse to be between, to be difference, to be importance; inter between + esse to be; cf. LL. interesse usury. See {Essence}.] [1913 Webster] 1.… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Interest —     Interest     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Interest     Notion of interest     Interest is a value exacted or promised over and above the restitution of a borrowed capital.     ♦ Moratory interest, that is interest due as an indemnity or a… …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • interest — Interest, Versura, B. Prendre à interest, Versuram facere, B. ex Cic. Argent prins à interest, ou perte de finance, Circunforaneum aes. Tu y as interest, Ad te attinent, et tua refert. Il n y a point d interest, Non interest quid faciat morbum,… …   Thresor de la langue françoyse

  • interest — [in′trist, in′trəst, in′tər ist; ] also, esp. for v. [, in′tər est΄, in′trest΄] n. [ME interesse < ML usury, compensation (in L, to be between, be different, interest < inter , between + esse, to be: see IS1): altered, infl. by OFr interest …   English World dictionary

  • Interest — In ter*est, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Interested}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Interesting}.] [From interess d, p. p. of the older form interess, fr. F. int[ e]resser, L. interesse. See {Interest}, n.] [1913 Webster] 1. To engage the attention of; to awaken… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • interest — [n1] attraction, curiosity absorption, activity, affection, attentiveness, care, case, concern, concernment, consequence, diversion, engrossment, enthusiasm, excitement, game, hobby, importance, interestedness, into, leisure activity, matter,… …   New thesaurus

  • interest — ► NOUN 1) the state of wanting to know about something or someone. 2) the quality of exciting curiosity or holding the attention. 3) a subject about which one is concerned or enthusiastic. 4) money paid for the use of money lent. 5) a person s… …   English terms dictionary

  • Interest —   Interest is the charge or cost for using money; expressed as a rate per period, usually one year, called interest rate.   The reward for making funds available to a third party over a period of time, usually pre arranged …   International financial encyclopaedia

  • interest — is now normally pronounced in trist or in trest, with the first e unpronounced. The same applies to the derivative words interested, interesting, etc …   Modern English usage

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