money of account

  • 91money — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ big ▪ There is big money in golf for the top players. ▪ easy ▪ He started stealing as a way of making easy money. ▪ bonus …

    Collocations dictionary

  • 92Money bag — Moneybags redirects here. For the game character, see Moneybags (Spyro character). For the rapper, see E Moneybags. Money purse redirects here. For the money won as a prize, sometimes referred to as purse money , see prize money. Saint Homobonus… …

    Wikipedia

  • 93money — mon|ey [ mʌni ] noun uncount *** what you earn, save, invest and use to pay for things. Money can be kept in a bank, where it can earn interest. If you have a bank account, you can pay for things with a check: No, I can t come, I haven t got any… …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 94money — [[t]mʌ̱ni[/t]] ♦ monies, moneys (plural) 1) N UNCOUNT Money is the coins or bank notes that you use to buy things, or the sum that you have in a bank account. A lot of the money that you pay at the cinema goes back to the film distributors...… …

    English dictionary

  • 95money */*/*/ — UK [ˈmʌnɪ] / US noun [uncountable] Metaphor: Money is like food, which gets eaten or is shared out. The same idea is used to talk about other types of resource. They didn t get a fair share/slice of the cake/pie. ♦ The rent takes a large bite out …

    English dictionary

  • 96Account — In accountancy, an account is a label used for recording and reporting a quantity of almost anything. Most often it is a record of an amount of money owned or owed by or to a particular person or entity, or allocated to a particular purpose. It… …

    Wikipedia

  • 97Money Bin — The Money Bin is a fictional structure in Disney comic books, first appearing in comic book stories created by Carl Barks. It was later depicted in animated cartoons such as the theatrical short Scrooge McDuck and Money and the television series… …

    Wikipedia

  • 98account for — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms account for : present tense I/you/we/they account for he/she/it accounts for present participle accounting for past tense accounted for past participle accounted for 1) account for something to be the reason… …

    English dictionary

  • 99account — I. noun Etymology: Middle English acounte, accompte, from Anglo French acunte, from acunter Date: 14th century 1. archaic reckoning, computation 2. a. a record of debit and credit entries to cover transactions involving a particular item or a… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 100Money-Purchase Pension Plan — A pension plan to which employers and employees make contributions based on a percentage of annual earnings, in accordance with the terms of the plan. Upon retirement, the total pool of capital in the member s account can be used to purchase a… …

    Investment dictionary