| moneyed |  |  | 
| adj.  | 1. moneyed, monied | based on or arising from the possession of money or wealth.; "moneyed interests" | 
| adj.  | 2. affluent, flush, loaded, moneyed, wealthy | having an abundant supply of money or possessions of value.; "an affluent banker"; "a speculator flush with cash"; "not merely rich but loaded"; "moneyed aristocrats"; "wealthy corporations" | 
 |  ~ rich | possessing material wealth.; "her father is extremely rich"; "many fond hopes are pinned on rich uncles" | 
| currency |  |  | 
| n. (possession) | 1. currency | the metal or paper medium of exchange that is presently used. | 
 |  ~ medium of exchange, monetary system | anything that is generally accepted as a standard of value and a measure of wealth in a particular country or region. | 
 |  ~ money | the official currency issued by a government or national bank.; "he changed his money into francs" | 
 |  ~ eurocurrency | currency of the major financial and industrial countries held in those countries for the purpose of lending and borrowing. | 
 |  ~ cash, hard cash, hard currency | money in the form of bills or coins.; "there is a desperate shortage of hard cash" | 
 |  ~ hard currency | a currency that is not likely to depreciate suddenly in value.; "the countries agreed to conduct their bilateral trade in hard currency, replacing previous barter arrangements"; "Germany once had a solid economy, good fiscal and monetary policies, and a hard currency" | 
 |  ~ folding money, paper currency, paper money | currency issued by a government or central bank and consisting of printed paper that can circulate as a substitute for specie. | 
 |  ~ coinage, metal money, mintage, specie | coins collectively. | 
| n. (attribute) | 2. currency | general acceptance or use.; "the currency of ideas" | 
 |  ~ prevalence | the quality of prevailing generally; being widespread.; "he was surprised by the prevalence of optimism about the future" | 
| n. (attribute) | 3. currency, currentness, up-to-dateness | the property of belonging to the present time.; "the currency of a slang term" | 
 |  ~ nowness, presentness | the quality of being the present.; "a study of the pastness of the present and...of the presentness of the past" | 
 |  ~ contemporaneity, contemporaneousness, modernity, modernness, modernism | the quality of being current or of the present.; "a shopping mall would instill a spirit of modernity into this village" | 
| money |  |  | 
| n. (possession) | 1. money | the most common medium of exchange; functions as legal tender.; "we tried to collect the money he owed us" | 
 |  ~ appropriation | money set aside (as by a legislature) for a specific purpose. | 
 |  ~ money supply | the total stock of money in the economy; currency held by the public plus money in accounts in banks. | 
 |  ~ fund, monetary fund | a reserve of money set aside for some purpose. | 
 |  ~ medium of exchange, monetary system | anything that is generally accepted as a standard of value and a measure of wealth in a particular country or region. | 
 |  ~ boodle, clams, dinero, gelt, kale, lettuce, lolly, lucre, moolah, pelf, shekels, simoleons, wampum, bread, cabbage, dough, loot, scratch, sugar | informal terms for money. | 
 |  ~ shinplaster | paper money of little value issued on insufficient security. | 
 |  ~ subsidisation, subsidization | money (or other benefits) obtained as a subsidy. | 
 |  ~ token money | coins of regular issue whose face value is greater than their intrinsic value. | 
| n. (possession) | 2. money | wealth reckoned in terms of money.; "all his money is in real estate" | 
 |  ~ wealth | property that has economic utility: a monetary value or an exchange value. | 
 |  ~ big bucks, big money, megabucks, bundle, pile | a large sum of money (especially as pay or profit).; "she made a bundle selling real estate"; "they sank megabucks into their new house" | 
| n. (possession) | 3. money | the official currency issued by a government or national bank.; "he changed his money into francs" | 
 |  ~ sterling | British money; especially the pound sterling as the basic monetary unit of the UK. | 
 |  ~ currency | the metal or paper medium of exchange that is presently used. | 
Recent comments
5 days 9 hours ago
1 week 4 days ago
1 week 4 days ago
6 weeks 20 hours ago
21 weeks 4 days ago
28 weeks 1 day ago
41 weeks 2 days ago
44 weeks 2 days ago
46 weeks 1 day ago
1 year 1 week ago