金额
jīn é
Pinyin

Definition

金额
 - 
jīn é
  1. sum of money
  2. monetary value

Character Decomposition

Related Words (20)

xiàn jīn
  1. 1 cash
zī jīn
  1. 1 funds
  2. 2 funding
  3. 3 capital
Jīn
  1. 1 surname Jin
  2. 2 surname Kim (Korean)
  3. 3 Jurchen Jin dynasty (1115-1234)
Jīn gāng
  1. 1 King Kong
jīn zì tǎ
  1. 1 pyramid (building or structure)
jīn bì
  1. 1 gold coin
jīn zhī yù yè
  1. 1 golden branch, jade leaves (idiom); fig. blue-blooded nobility, esp. imperial kinsmen or peerless beauty
Jīn niú
  1. 1 Taurus (star sign)
  2. 2 Jinniu district of Chengdu city 成都市[Chéng dū shì], Sichuan
Jīn niú zuò
  1. 1 Taurus (constellation and sign of the zodiac)
jīn róng
  1. 1 banking
  2. 2 finance
  3. 3 financial
jīn qián
  1. 1 money
  2. 2 currency
Jīn líng
  1. 1 pre-Han name for Nanjing
  2. 2 common place name
huáng jīn
  1. 1 gold
  2. 2 golden (opportunity)
  3. 3 prime (time)
gōng jī jīn
  1. 1 official reserves
  2. 2 accumulated fund
qiān jīn
  1. 1 thousand jin 斤 (pounds) of gold
  2. 2 money and riches
  3. 3 (honorific) invaluable (support)
  4. 4 (honorific) daughter
hé jīn
  1. 1 alloy
xī jīn
  1. 1 money-spinning
  2. 2 moneymaking
jī jīn
  1. 1 fund
jī jīn huì
  1. 1 foundation (institution supported by an endowment)
Xiǎo jīn
  1. 1 Xiaojin county (Tibetan: btsan lha rdzong) in Ngawa Tibetan and Qiang autonomous prefecture 阿壩藏族羌族自治州|阿坝藏族羌族自治州[Ā bà Zàng zú Qiāng zú zì zhì zhōu], northwest Sichuan

Idioms (20)

一字千金
yī zì qiān jīn
  1. 1 one word worth a thousand in gold (idiom)
  2. 2 (in praise of a piece of writing or calligraphy) each character is perfect
  3. 3 each word is highly valued
一寸光阴一寸金
yī cùn guāng yīn yī cùn jīn
  1. 1 lit. An interval of time is worth an ounce of gold. (idiom)
  2. 2 fig. free time is to be treasured
一寸光阴一寸金,寸金难买寸光阴
yī cùn guāng yīn yī cùn jīn , cùn jīn nán mǎi cùn guāng yīn
  1. 1 lit. An interval of time is worth an ounce of gold, money cannot buy you time. (idiom)
  2. 2 fig. Time is precious and must be treasured.
一掷千金
yī zhì qiān jīn
  1. 1 lit. stake a thousand pieces of gold on one throw (idiom); to throw away money recklessly
  2. 2 extravagant
一言千金
yī yán qiān jīn
  1. 1 one word worth a thousand in gold (idiom); valuable advice
  2. 2 words of enormous weight
一诺千金
yī nuò qiān jīn
  1. 1 a promise worth one thousand in gold (idiom); a promise that must be kept
千金一掷
qiān jīn yī zhì
  1. 1 lit. stake a thousand pieces of gold on one throw (idiom); to throw away money recklessly
  2. 2 extravagant
千金一诺
qiān jīn yī nuò
  1. 1 a promise worth one thousand in gold (idiom); a promise that must be kept
千金难买
qiān jīn nán mǎi
  1. 1 can't be bought for one thousand in gold (idiom)
固若金汤
gù ruò jīn tāng
  1. 1 secure as a city protected by a wall of metal and a moat of boiling water (idiom)
  2. 2 well fortified
  3. 3 invulnerable to attack
如金似玉
rú jīn sì yù
  1. 1 like gold or jade (idiom)
  2. 2 gorgeous
  3. 3 lovely
  4. 4 splendorous
家累千金,坐不垂堂
jiā lěi qiān jīn , zuò bù chuí táng
  1. 1 lit. a wealthy person does not sit under the eaves (idiom); fig. a rich man does not expose himself to danger
寸土寸金
cùn tǔ cùn jīn
  1. 1 land is extremely expensive (in that area) (idiom)
寸金难买寸光阴
cùn jīn nán mǎi cùn guāng yīn
  1. 1 An ounce of gold can't buy you an interval of time (idiom); Money can't buy you time.
  2. 2 Time is precious.
情比金坚
qíng bǐ jīn jiān
  1. 1 love is more solid than gold (idiom)
拾金不昧
shí jīn bù mèi
  1. 1 to pick up money and not hide it (idiom); to return property to its owner
挥金如土
huī jīn rú tǔ
  1. 1 lit. to squander money like dirt (idiom)
  2. 2 fig. to spend money like water
  3. 3 extravagant
擂鼓鸣金
léi gǔ míng jīn
  1. 1 to beat the drum and sound the gong (idiom); fig. to order an advance or retreat
  2. 2 to egg people on or to call them back
击鼓鸣金
jī gǔ míng jīn
  1. 1 to beat the drum and sound the gong (idiom); fig. to order an advance or retreat
  2. 2 to egg people on or to call them back
敝帚千金
bì zhǒu qiān jīn
  1. 1 lit. my worn-out broom, a thousand in gold (idiom); fig. sentimental value
  2. 2 I wouldn't be parted with it for anything.

Sample Sentences

与此同时,屏幕上出现了各类商品的数量和金额,这时点击“结账将支付宝付款码对着扫描仪一扫,就完成了付款。
yǔcǐtóngshí ,píngmù shàng chūxiàn le gèlèi shāngpǐn de shùliàng hé jīné ,zhèshí diǎnjī “jiézhàng jiāng Zhīfùbǎo fùkuǎn mǎ duì zhe sǎomiáoyí yī sǎo ,jiù wánchéng le fùkuǎn 。
At the same time, the number and amount of various items appear on the screen, Click “pay” and flash Alipay barcode details to the scanner to complete the payment process
好的,您的身份资料都正确,请问,您记得上一笔刷卡的地点跟金额吗?
hǎo de ,nín de shēnfèn zīliào dōu zhèngquè ,qǐngwèn ,nín jìde shàng yī bǐ shuā kǎ de dìdiǎn gēn jīn\'é ma ?
OK, your identification details are all correct. Can I ask, do you remember the last place you used your card and the amount?
Go to Lesson 
另外,挂失信用卡会收取一笔挂失手续费,记在下个月的帐单上,金额是两千块。
lìngwài ,guàshī xìnyòngkǎ huì shōuqǔ yī bǐ guàshī shǒuxùfèi ,jì zài xià gè yuè de zhàngdān shàng ,jīné shì liǎng qiān kuài 。
Also, there is a processing fee for reporting a lost card, it will be included in your next bill, the fee is RMB2000.
Go to Lesson 
挂失请按一,海外服务请按二,本期账单金额查询请按三,红利点数查询请按四,信用卡最新优惠请按五,转接专员请按九。
guàshī qǐng àn yī ,hǎiwài fúwù qǐng àn èr ,běnqī zhàngdān jīn\'é cháxún qǐng àn sān ,hónglì diǎnshù cháxún qǐng àn sì ,xìnyòngkǎ zuìxīn yōuhuì qǐng àn wǔ ,zhuǎnjiē zhuānyuán qǐng àn jiǔ 。
To report a loss, press one, for overseas services, press two, to look up your most recent credit card bill, press three, to look up your reward points, press four, for the most recent credit card offers, press five, to talk to a bank representative, press nine.
Go to Lesson 
有的险种对现金和金银损失被盗有一定金额的保障,但有的险种就明确规定不赔付贵重物品。如果投保人都觉得自己家的收藏是无价之宝,那保险公司不就亏大了?
yǒude xiǎnzhǒng duì xiànjīn hé jīnyín sǔnshī bèi dào yǒu yīdìng jīn\'é de bǎozhàng ,dàn yǒude xiǎnzhǒng jiù míngquè guīdìng bù péifù guìzhòng wùpǐn 。rúguǒ tóubǎorén dōu juéde zìjǐ jiā de shōucáng shì wújiàzhībǎo ,nà bǎoxiǎngōngsī bù jiù kuīdà le ?
There are types of insurance that have a set amount they will cover for cash and gold or silver losses from burglary, but some plans clearly stipulate that they don't compensate for valuables. If all the policyholders thought that the things in their homes were priceless, then the insurance companies would take huge losses, no?