Your john hancock Meaning in English
expression
ˈjɔɹ/, /ˈjʊɹ/ /ˈdʒɑn/ /ˈhænˌkɑk
YOR jon HAN-kok
jˈɔː/ /dʒˈɒn/ /ˈhænˌkɒk
yaw JON HAN-kok
释义
An informal American expression meaning 'your signature' or asking someone to sign their name, especially on a document.
用法与细微差别
This is informal, used mainly in American English. It refers to signing your name, often humorously. Don’t use it in formal writing or outside the US; simply say 'signature' instead. Commonly used like: 'Put your John Hancock here.'
Spanish: tu firmaPortuguese (BR): sua assinaturaPortuguese (PT): a tua assinaturaChinese (Simplified): 你的签名Chinese (Traditional): 你的簽名Hindi: तुम्हारा हस्ताक्षरArabic: توقيعكBengali: তোমার স্বাক্ষরRussian: твоя подписьJapanese: あなたのサインVietnamese: chữ ký của bạnKorean: 네 서명Turkish: senin imzanUrdu: تمہارا دستخطIndonesian: tanda tanganmu
例句
Please put your John Hancock on this form.
basic
Just give me your John Hancock at the bottom of the page.
basic
Don't forget to write your John Hancock before you leave.
basic
Alright, I just need your John Hancock to make this official.
natural
Mind putting your John Hancock right here for me?
natural
They won't let you in without your John Hancock on the list.
natural