bills / bɪl /

账单帐单票据钞票

bills2 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a statement of money owed for goods or services supplied: He paid the hotel bill when he checked out.
  2. a piece of paper money worth a specified amount: a ten-dollar bill.
  3. Government. a form or draft of a proposed statute presented to a legislature, but not yet enacted or passed and made law.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to charge for by bill; send a bill to: The store will bill me.
  2. to enter in a bill; make a bill or list of: to bill goods.
  3. to advertise by bill or public notice: A new actor was billed for this week.
  4. to schedule on a program: The management billed the play for two weeks.

bills 近义词

n. 名词 noun

account of charges; money owed

n. 名词 noun

list; circular

n. 名词 noun

piece of legislation

bills 的近义词 6
bills 的反义词 1
n. 名词 noun

piece of paper money

bills 的近义词 8
bills 的反义词 1
n. 名词 noun

beak of animal

bills 的近义词 5
bills 的反义词 1
v. 动词 verb

charge money for goods, services

v. 动词 verb

advertise

bills 的近义词 4

更多bills例句

  1. 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.
  2. “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.
  3. 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.
  4. The bills are usually paid in private, with no public disclosure.
  5. They would allow lawmakers to pass, or at least put up to vote, targeted bills on unemployment, increased testing, and other issues.
  6. “Someone is determined to keep Bill Cosby off TV,” she continued.
  7. True, this may not be what James Madison had in mind when he was writing the Bill of Rights.
  8. But at the heart of this “Truther” conspiracy theory is the idea that “someone” wants to destroy Bill Cosby.
  9. She fails to appreciate the congressional and constitutional obstacles Johnson had to overcome to win passage of the bill.
  10. That is the difference between the protections embedded in our Bill of Rights and the lived lives of our citizenry.
  11. The lack of bill buyers in foreign countries who will quote as low rates on dollar as on sterling bills.
  12. Several able speakers had made long addresses in support of the bill when one Mr. Morrisett, from Monroe, took the floor.
  13. He is what the bill wishes to make for us, a regular root doctor, and will suit the place exactly.
  14. 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.
  15. For Mrs. Robin had an end of a pinkish-white worm in her bill, on which she was tugging as hard as she could.