exchange
Americanverb (used with object)
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to give up (something) for something else; part with for some equivalent; change for another.
- Synonyms:
- swap, trade, barter, commute, interchange
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to replace (returned merchandise) with an equivalent or something else.
Most stores will allow the purchaser to exchange goods.
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to give and receive reciprocally; interchange.
to exchange blows; to exchange gifts.
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to part with in return for some equivalent; transfer for a recompense; barter.
to exchange goods with foreign countries.
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Chess. to capture (an enemy piece) in return for a capture by the opponent generally of pieces of equal value.
verb (used without object)
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to make an exchange; engage in bartering, replacing, or substituting one thing for another.
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to pass or be taken in exchange or as an equivalent.
noun
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the act, process, or an instance of exchanging.
The contesting nations arranged for an exchange of prisoners; money in exchange for services.
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something that is given or received in exchange or substitution for something else.
The car was a fair exchange.
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a place for buying and selling commodities, securities, etc., typically open only to members.
- Synonyms:
- market
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a central office or central station.
a telephone exchange.
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the method or system by which debits and credits in different places are settled without the actual transfer of money, by means of bills of exchange representing money values.
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the discharge of obligations in different places by the transfer of credits.
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the amount or percentage charged for exchanging money, collecting a draft, etc.
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the reciprocal transfer of equivalent sums of money, as in the currencies of two different countries.
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the giving or receiving of a sum of money in one place for a bill ordering the payment of an equivalent sum in another.
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the amount of the difference in value between two or more currencies, or between the values of the same currency at two or more places.
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the checks, drafts, etc., exchanged at a clearinghouse.
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Chess. a reciprocal capture of pieces of equivalent value by opponents in a single series of moves.
verb
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(tr) to give up, part with, or transfer (one thing) for an equivalent
to exchange gifts
to exchange francs for dollars
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(tr) to give and receive (information, ideas, etc); interchange
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(tr) to replace (one thing) with another, esp to replace unsatisfactory goods
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to transfer or hand over (goods) in return for the equivalent value in kind rather than in money; barter; trade
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(tr) chess to capture and surrender (pieces, usually of the same value) in a single sequence of moves
noun
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the act or process of exchanging
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anything given or received as an equivalent, replacement, or substitute for something else
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( as modifier )
an exchange student
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an argument or quarrel; altercation
the two men had a bitter exchange
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Also called: telephone exchange. a switching centre in which telephone lines are interconnected
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a place where securities or commodities are sold, bought, or traded, esp by brokers or merchants
a stock exchange
a corn exchange
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( as modifier )
an exchange broker
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the system by which commercial debts between parties in different places are settled by commercial documents, esp bills of exchange, instead of by direct payment of money
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the percentage or fee charged for accepting payment in this manner
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a transfer or interchange of sums of money of equivalent value, as between different national currencies or different issues of the same currency
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(often plural) the cheques, drafts, bills, etc, exchanged or settled between banks in a clearing house
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chess the capture by both players of pieces of equal value, usually on consecutive moves
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chess to lose a rook in return for a bishop or knight
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chess to win a rook in return for a bishop or knight
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med another word for transfusion
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physics a process in which a particle is transferred between two nucleons, such as the transfer of a meson between two nucleons
Other Word Forms
- exchangeability noun
- exchangeable adjective
- exchangeably adverb
- exchanger noun
- preexchange verb (used with object)
- reexchange verb
- unexchanged adjective
Etymology
Origin of exchange
First recorded in 1250–1300; (for the verb) Middle English eschaungen, from Anglo-French eschaungier, from Vulgar Latin excambiāre (unrecorded); equivalent to ex- 1 + change ); noun derivative of the verb
Explanation
To exchange means to trade one thing for another. If you and your friend both prefer what the other has brought for lunch, you should exchange lunches. Exchange, which is both a noun and a verb, comes from the Latin ex-, meaning "out" and cambiare, for "change" or "substitute." If you're traveling in Europe, you exchange U.S. Dollars for Euros. If you get a really awful outfit for your birthday present, you can go to the store and exchange it for one you like better. The correspondence between you and your loved one is an exchange of love letters. An argument is an exchange of opinions.
Vocabulary lists containing exchange
List 1
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"Ad Power," "Without Commercials," and "What's Wrong with Advertising"
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"Principles of Business," Vocabulary from Chapter 3
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Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
Diplomacy now has a live-market feed, one that operates on a 24-hour crypto exchange with no circuit breaker and is visible simultaneously to every government, hedge fund, and sanctions-compliance desk on earth.
From Barron's • Apr. 18, 2026
While papers are shredded in some offices, two Tisza insiders told the BBC, officials are offering Tisza pen drives with digital copies, in exchange for keeping their jobs, or immunity from prosecution.
From BBC • Apr. 17, 2026
But she feels annoyed every time they don’t bother explaining visual references, like a gift exchange in a 2024 holiday-season episode that left her in the dark.
From The Wall Street Journal • Apr. 17, 2026
This shift alters how the atoms interact with one another through dipolar exchange, which depends on their relative angles.
From Science Daily • Apr. 17, 2026
“Best day of business so far. Traded some wolf bark to an itchy chipmunk in exchange for her entire winter’s nut collection.”
From "The Undead Fox of Deadwood Forest" by Aubrey Hartman
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.