English to Binisaya - Cebuano Dictionary and Thesaurus.

Dictionary Binisaya to EnglishEnglish to BinisayaSense
Word:

 

Word - rootword - affixes
nanguwarta - kuwarta - ^ng<k~na-~
na.ngu.war.ta. - 4 syllables

^ng<k = nguwarta
na- = nanguwarta
nanguwarta

nanguwarta : mulcted (adj.)
kuwarta : cash (n.); currency (n.); money (n.); fourth gear (n.)

Derivatives of kuwarta


Glosses:
mulct
n. (possession)1. amercement, fine, mulctmoney extracted as a penalty.
~ penaltya payment required for not fulfilling a contract.
~ library finefine imposed by a library on books that overdue when returned.
v. (social)2. bunco, con, defraud, diddle, gip, goldbrick, gyp, hornswoggle, mulct, nobble, rook, scam, short-change, swindle, victimizedeprive of by deceit.; "He swindled me out of my inheritance"; "She defrauded the customers who trusted her"; "the cashier gypped me when he gave me too little change"
~ short, short-changecheat someone by not returning him enough money.
~ cheat, rip off, chiseldeprive somebody of something by deceit.; "The con-man beat me out of $50"; "This salesman ripped us off!"; "we were cheated by their clever-sounding scheme"; "They chiseled me out of my money"
v. (possession)3. mulctimpose a fine on.; "he was fined for littering"
~ levy, imposeimpose and collect.; "levy a fine"
currency
n. (possession)1. currencythe metal or paper medium of exchange that is presently used.
~ medium of exchange, monetary systemanything that is generally accepted as a standard of value and a measure of wealth in a particular country or region.
~ moneythe official currency issued by a government or national bank.; "he changed his money into francs"
~ eurocurrencycurrency of the major financial and industrial countries held in those countries for the purpose of lending and borrowing.
~ cash, hard cash, hard currencymoney in the form of bills or coins.; "there is a desperate shortage of hard cash"
~ hard currencya 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 moneycurrency issued by a government or central bank and consisting of printed paper that can circulate as a substitute for specie.
~ coinage, metal money, mintage, speciecoins collectively.
n. (attribute)2. currencygeneral acceptance or use.; "the currency of ideas"
~ prevalencethe quality of prevailing generally; being widespread.; "he was surprised by the prevalence of optimism about the future"
n. (attribute)3. currency, currentness, up-to-datenessthe property of belonging to the present time.; "the currency of a slang term"
~ nowness, presentnessthe quality of being the present.; "a study of the pastness of the present and...of the presentness of the past"
~ contemporaneity, contemporaneousness, modernity, modernness, modernismthe quality of being current or of the present.; "a shopping mall would instill a spirit of modernity into this village"
money
n. (possession)1. moneythe most common medium of exchange; functions as legal tender.; "we tried to collect the money he owed us"
~ appropriationmoney set aside (as by a legislature) for a specific purpose.
~ money supplythe total stock of money in the economy; currency held by the public plus money in accounts in banks.
~ fund, monetary funda reserve of money set aside for some purpose.
~ medium of exchange, monetary systemanything 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, sugarinformal terms for money.
~ shinplasterpaper money of little value issued on insufficient security.
~ subsidisation, subsidizationmoney (or other benefits) obtained as a subsidy.
~ token moneycoins of regular issue whose face value is greater than their intrinsic value.
n. (possession)2. moneywealth reckoned in terms of money.; "all his money is in real estate"
~ wealthproperty that has economic utility: a monetary value or an exchange value.
~ big bucks, big money, megabucks, bundle, pilea 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. moneythe official currency issued by a government or national bank.; "he changed his money into francs"
~ sterlingBritish money; especially the pound sterling as the basic monetary unit of the UK.
~ currencythe metal or paper medium of exchange that is presently used.