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bill and coo

/bil/US // bɪl //UK // (bɪl) //

钞票和咕咕,帐单和帐簿,帐单和帐单,钞票和咕噜

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a statement of money owed for goods or services supplied: He paid the hotel bill when he checked out.
    • : a piece of paper money worth a specified amount: a ten-dollar bill.
    • : Government. a form or draft of a proposed statute presented to a legislature, but not yet enacted or passed and made law.
    • : bill of exchange.
    • : a written or printed public notice or advertisement.
    • : any written paper containing a statement of particulars: a bill of expenditures.
    • : Law. a written statement, usually of complaint, presented to a court.
    • : Slang. one hundred dollars: The job pays five bills a week.
    • : playbill.
    • : entertainment scheduled for presentation; program: a good bill at the movies.
    • : Obsolete. a promissory note.a written and sealed document.a written, formal petition.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1
    • : to charge for by bill; send a bill to: The store will bill me.
    • : to enter in a bill; make a bill or list of: to bill goods.
    • : to advertise by bill or public notice: A new actor was billed for this week.
    • : to schedule on a program: The management billed the play for two weeks.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • What starts with a few innocent bills can—before you know it—become an overwhelming document pile you’re forced to tear through in a panic looking for your lost passport.

  • “We are currently growing at 110% average month on month in sales and our average bill value has gone up by 10 times in the last 6 months,” he said.

  • An investigation this year by ProPublica found that companies run by the governor’s family have accumulated $128 million in judgments and settlements in cases brought by vendors and other businesses and government entities over unpaid bills.

  • The bills are usually paid in private, with no public disclosure.

  • They would allow lawmakers to pass, or at least put up to vote, targeted bills on unemployment, increased testing, and other issues.

  • “Someone is determined to keep Bill Cosby off TV,” she continued.

  • True, this may not be what James Madison had in mind when he was writing the Bill of Rights.

  • But at the heart of this “Truther” conspiracy theory is the idea that “someone” wants to destroy Bill Cosby.

  • She fails to appreciate the congressional and constitutional obstacles Johnson had to overcome to win passage of the bill.

  • That is the difference between the protections embedded in our Bill of Rights and the lived lives of our citizenry.

  • The lack of bill buyers in foreign countries who will quote as low rates on dollar as on sterling bills.

  • Several able speakers had made long addresses in support of the bill when one Mr. Morrisett, from Monroe, took the floor.

  • He is what the bill wishes to make for us, a regular root doctor, and will suit the place exactly.

  • Then, you know, she had no right to play in the Rooms again; she was supposed to pay her hotel bill, and leave Monte Carlo.

  • For Mrs. Robin had an end of a pinkish-white worm in her bill, on which she was tugging as hard as she could.