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unfunded

/uhn-fuhn-did/US // ʌnˈfʌn dɪd //

没有资金,没有经费,无经费,无资金

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : not provided with a fund or money; not financed.
    • : Finance. floating.

Examples

  • The total cost is a big part of the billions of dollars the city claims it has in unfunded infrastructure needs.

  • The latest study, which was unfunded, found coelacanths live five times longer than once predicted.

  • Some safety advocates say the mayor’s response has been ineffective in addressing traffic deaths, saying greater commitment is needed, including funding for a comprehensive Vision Zero bill that passed last year and is largely unfunded.

  • You might wonder what kinds of fiscal policies Republicans have been pushing lately while they pooh-pooh Democrats’ too-unfunded-yet-also-too-funded agenda.

  • As Andy Keatts detailed in a story Monday, San Diego has a huge infrastructure backlog and half of the unfunded projects over the next five years involve fixing the stormwater system.

  • All because he didn't have to put $1 an hour towards the pension fund's unfunded liability.

  • Many jurisdictions have treated Gideon as an unfunded mandate.

  • Oddly, one of the top virtues of Social Security is that it is unfunded.

  • The ones on the verge of bankruptcy, with large, unfunded pension obligations.

  • In most cases, an unfunded liability is an even bigger invitation to mischief than a funded one.

  • These bills pass from hand to hand as money, and form part of the public unfunded debt of Great Britain.

  • The ancient name of the national banking account has been attached to two of the forms of unfunded national debt.

  • The debt incurred by the nation since 1813 was still unfunded.

  • In the end the question of a settlement of the unfunded debt was allowed to remain open.

  • The income arising from current labor is unfunded, because there is no permanent fund of accumulated wealth corresponding to it.