moneyless 的 2 个定义
plural mon·eys, mon·ies [muhn-eez]. /ˈmʌn iz/.
- any circulating medium of exchange, including coins, paper money, and demand deposits.
- paper money.
- gold, silver, or other metal in pieces of convenient form stamped by public authority and issued as a medium of exchange and measure of value.
- (12)
- of or relating to money.
- used for carrying, keeping, or handling money: Have you seen my little money purse?
- of or relating to capital or finance: the money business.
moneyless 近义词
等同于 penniless
等同于 poor
moneyless 的近义词 37 个
- destitute
- impoverished
- indigent
- low
- meager
- needy
- penniless
- poverty-stricken
- underprivileged
- bankrupt
- down-and-out
- flat
- insolvent
- scanty
- suffering
- bad off
- beggared
- beggarly
- behind eight ball
- broke
- dirt poor
- empty-handed
- flat broke
- fortuneless
- hard up
- impecunious
- in need
- in want
- necessitous
- pauperized
- penurious
- pinched
- reduced
- stone broke
- strapped
- truly needy
- unprosperous
moneyless 的反义词 15 个
等同于 poverty-stricken
moneyless 的近义词 31 个
- destitute
- distressed
- impoverished
- indigent
- needy
- poor
- strapped
- bad off
- bankrupt
- beggared
- beggarly
- broke
- dirt poor
- down and out
- down-and-out
- hard up
- impencunious
- in dire circumstances
- in great need; financially poor
- in want
- miserably poor
- necessitous
- needful
- penniless
- penurious
- short
- stone broke
- stranded
- suffering
- unmoneyed
- wanting
moneyless 的反义词 5 个
等同于 necessitous
moneyless 的近义词 37 个
- bad off
- bankrupt
- beggared
- beggarly
- behind eight ball
- broke
- destitute
- dirt poor
- down-and-out
- empty-handed
- flat
- flat broke
- fortuneless
- hard up
- impecunious
- impoverished
- in need
- in want
- indigent
- insolvent
- low
- meager
- needy
- on one's uppers
- pauperized
- penniless
- penurious
- pinched
- poverty-stricken
- reduced
- scanty
- stone broke
- strapped
- suffering
- truly needy
- underprivileged
- unprosperous
等同于 destitute
moneyless 的近义词 37 个
- bad off
- bankrupt
- beggared
- beggarly
- behind eight ball
- broke
- destitute
- dirt poor
- down-and-out
- empty-handed
- flat
- flat broke
- fortuneless
- hard up
- impecunious
- impoverished
- in need
- in want
- indigent
- insolvent
- low
- meager
- needy
- on one's uppers
- pauperized
- penniless
- penurious
- pinched
- poverty-stricken
- reduced
- scanty
- stone broke
- strapped
- suffering
- truly needy
- underprivileged
- unprosperous
等同于 down-and-out
由moneyless构成的短语
- money burns a hole in one's pocket
- money is no object
- money talks
- money to burn
- coin money
- color of one's money
- easy money
- even money
- fool and his money are soon parted
- for one's money
- funny money
- get one's money's worth
- hush money
- in the money
- made of money
- not for love or money
- on the money
- pay your money and take your choice
- pin money
- pocket money
- put money on
- put one's money where one's mouth is
- rolling in it (money)
- run for one's money
- throw good money after bad
- time is money
更多moneyless例句
- Combining that with advertisers’ increased upfront cancelation options, the money committed to traditional TV could wind up going to streaming.
- Noonan said his daughters sometimes work from an office in the Phoenix area and are classified as independent contractors, not earning “horrible money” but also not making minimum wage.
- Dalio’s $148 billion Bridgewater Associates has run up hefty losses this year, even as rivals have minted money in the topsy-turvy markets.
- They’re also shifting more of their money into value-stock ETFs.
- You can be right, too, whether you choose to take their money or not.
- And Epstein continues to steer money toward universities to advance scientific research.
- Speech, in this case, is our ability to spend money on a goofy entertainment.
- I suspect [Teresa] will get money sent in to her, so she can shop at the commissary.
- If nobody on the outside will send Teresa money, should she learn a prison hustle?
- She vowed to repay the money—no official word, however, on whether she ever did that.
- If Mac had been alone he would have made the post by sundown, for the Mounted Police rode picked horses, the best money could buy.
- All the Italian merchants in the realm of France, called money lenders, seized by order of Philip the fair, for their ransoms.
- The purchasers found that this claim was not well founded, and sought to recover their money.
- He was positive he had seen some one enter the room, go to the chair, and take the money from his pockets.
- Then both the partners laughed together—pleasantly and cheerfully, as men who are going to receive money, often do.