Encyclo - De online Nederlandstalige encyclopedieën in één oogopslag
Encyclopedia Sources Categories About Encyclo      Enzyklopädie-DE Encyclopedie-NL
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Index
Agriculture and Industry
Animals and Nature
Architecture and Buildings
Arts
Business and Law
Earth and Environment
Economy and Finance
Education
Electronics and Engineering
Film and Animation
Food and Drink
General
General technical and industrial
Government and organisations
Health and Medicine
History and Culture
Hobbies and Crafts
Language and Literature
Legal
Management
Mathematics and statistics
Meteorology and astronomy
Military and Defence
Music and Sound
People and society
Sciences
Sport and Leisure
Technical and IT
Travel and Transportation

Look up: Money

  1. money
    A medium of exchange.
    Found on http://www.usrarecoin.com/wv04.html

  2. Money
    Any item which is widely accepted as payment for products
    Found on http://www.bized.co.uk/cgi-bin/glossaryd

  3. Money
    Money is anything that fulfils the functions required for exchanging goods and services. Money should act as a unit of account, a medium of exchange, a standard for deferred payment and a store of value if it is to be most effective.
    Found on http://www.bized.co.uk/cgi-bin/glossaryd

  4. money
    [n] - the official currency issued by a government or national bank 2. [n] - the most common medium of exchange 3. [n] - wealth reckoned in terms of money
    Found on http://www.webdictionary.co.uk/definitio

  5. Money
    A financial asset, store of wealth and a medium of exchange. In economics, money can be referred to... <a target=_blank href='http://www.finance-glossary.com/terms/money.htm?id=12993&ginPtrCode=00000&PopupMode=false' title='Read full definition of money'>more</a>
    Found on http://www.finance-glossary.com/pages/ho

  6. money
    Any common medium of exchange acceptable in payment for goods or services or for the settlement of debts; legal tender. Money is usually coinage (invented by the Chinese in the second millennium BC)...
    Found on http://www.thehistorychannel.co.uk/site/

  7. money
    a collective name for the level of interest for the use of money (capital),which depends on the day-to-day business on the exchange; there are separate rates for debentures, the discounting of bill, credits, etc. Also: foreign exchange rate Category: Financial affairs - taxation - customs • money in use to finance current transactions as distinct from idle money Category: Economics<...
    Found on http://www.mijnwoordenboek.nl/definition

  8. Money
    Mon'ey noun ; plural Moneys . [ Middle English moneie , Old French moneie , French monnaie , from Latin moneta . See Mint place where coin is made, Mind , and confer Moidore , Monetary .] 1. A piece of metal, as gold, silver, copper, etc., coined, or stamped, and issued by the sovereign authority as a medium of exchan ...
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/M/92

  9. Money
    Mon'ey transitive verb To supply with money. [ Obsolete]
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/M/92

  10. money
    Origin: OE. Moneie, OF. Moneie, F. Monnaie, fr. L. Moneta. See Mint place where coin is made, Mind, and cf. Moidore, Monetary. ... 1. A piece of metal, as gold, silver, copper, etc, coined, or stamped, and issued by the sovereign authority as a medium of exchange in financial transactions between citizens and with government; also, any number of suc ...
    Found on http://www.mondofacto.com/facts/dictiona

  11. money
    noun the most common medium of exchange; functions as legal tender; `we tried to collect the money he owed us`
    Found on http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?

  12. Money
    Currency and coin that are guaranteed as legal tender by the government, a regulatory agency or bank.
    Found on http://www.duke.edu/~charvey/Classes/wpg

  13. money
    A good that acts as a medium of exchange in transactions. Classically it is said that money acts as a unit of account, a store of value, and a medium of exchange. Most authors find that the first two are nonessential properties that follow from the third. In fact, other goods are often better than money at being intertemporal stores of value, since...
    Found on http://www.econterms.com/glossary.cgi?qu

  14. Money
    `Money` is any token or other object that functions as a medium of exchange that is socially and legally accepted in payment for goods and services and in settlement of debts. Money also serves as a standard of value for measuring the relative worth of different goods and services and as a store of value. Some authors explicitly require money to be a standard of deferred payment. Money includes both currency, particularly the many circulating cu...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money

  15. money
    • (v. t.) To supply with money. • (n.) A piece of metal, as gold, silver, copper, etc., coined, or stamped, and issued by the sovereign authority as a medium of exchange in financial transactions between citizens and with government; also, any number of such pieces; coin. • (n.) Any written or stamped promise, certificate, or order, ...
    Found on http://thinkexist.com/dictionary/meaning

  16. Money
    (from the article `Robertson, Sir Dennis Holme`) ...first book, A Study of Industrial Fluctuation (1915), emphasized real rather than monetary forces, especially the interaction of invention and ...
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/m/111

  17. Money
    (from the article `English literature`) ...angled somewhere between scabrous relish and satiric disgust, offer prose that has the lurid energy of a strobe light playing over vistas of urban ...
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/m/111

  18. money
    a commodity accepted by general consent as a medium of economic exchange. It is the medium in which prices and values are expressed; as currency, it ... [31 related articles]
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/m/111

  19. money
    money 1. A medium that can be exchanged for goods and services and is used as a measure of their values on the market, including among its forms a commodity such as gold, an officially issued coin or note (paper), or a deposit in a checking account or other readily liquifiable account. 2. The official currency, coins, and negotiable paper notes issued b...
    Found on http://www.wordinfo.info/words/index/inf

  20. Money
    1. Anything that serves the three basic purposes of money: medium of exchange; store of value; unit of account. 2. In modern economies, a currency issued by an agency of government. 3. As an adjective, 'money' refers to the value of something denominated in the prevailing currency and not corrected for inflation; contrasts with real.
    Found on http://www-personal.umich.edu/~alandear/

  21. money
    money, term that actually refers to two concepts: the abstract unit of account in terms of which the value of goods, services, and obligations can be compared; and anything that is widely established as a means of payment. Frequently the standard of value also serves as a medium of exchange, but tha...
    Found on http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/bus/A08337


We are now searching for
• words containing `Money`;
• Alternative spelling;
• Wider definitions.

One moment please...

23 November 2009

This day in history:
At sixteen minutes past five on 23rd November 1963, a British television institution was born. Doctor Who would go on to become the longest-running science-fiction programme in the world, eventually spawning twenty six seasons of adventures from 1963 to 1989. In total, eight actors have played the part of Gallifrey's most famous Time Lord. From the very first - William Hartnell in 1963 - to the very last - Paul McGann, in the 1996 TV Movie - the Doctor has wandered through time and space in his trusty time machine, an old type-40 TARDIS (Time and Relative Dimensions in Space). Although appearing to be nothing more than a battered blue police box, it is in fact vastly bigger on the inside than on the outside, and always departs with its familiar wheezing, groaning sound. read more

Encyclo in your browser

Encyclo in the search bar of your browser? Click for more info! Would you like to use Encyco more often? Add an (extra) search option to the search field of your browser. Installed in 3 seconds, easy to remove.
More info

What is Encyclo?

Encyclo is a search engine for terms and definitions. Hundreds of websites contain wordlists, each with their own speciality. Encyclo brings those lists together and makes searching for definitions a lot easier.

Statistics

Encyclo has been online since october 15th 2007. It currently contains 3,264,100 words from 1007 sources. The words are listed in 32 categories.

Search

Type a word and press the `Search` button.

Recent searches

The most recent searches on Encyclo. Between brackets you will find the number of results and number of related results.
brachygnathia (3/0)
Head (8/25)
roentgenometer (2/0)
Cultor (2/0)
Equilibrium (25/25)
deceit (4/10)
Head-hunter (3/0)
Ada (4/25)
mousy (6/0)
Adam (8/25)
Congreve (4/11)
Aerobic (25/25)
Porter (22/25)
chappal (2/1)
serge (9/25)
Slashy (2/0)
emoluments (3/0)
Ik (2/25)
MS-1 (7/3)
petro (2/25)
Inc. (3/0)
Sialoproteins (2/0)
Ali (14/25)
Auf (3/25)

© Encyclo MMIX
Contact Privacy