finance

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fi·nance

 (fə-năns′, fī-, fī′năns′)
n.
1. The management of money, banking, investments, and credit.
2. finances Monetary resources: could not make the purchase because of limited finances.
3. The supplying of funds or capital.
tr.v. fi·nanced, fi·nanc·ing, fi·nanc·es
1. To provide or raise the funds or capital for: financed a new car.
2. To supply funds to: financing a daughter through law school.

[Middle English finaunce, settlement, money supply, from Old French finance, payment, from finer, to pay ransom, from fin, end, from Latin fīnis.]

fi·nance′a·ble adj.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

finance

(fɪˈnæns; ˈfaɪnæns)
n
1. (Banking & Finance) the system of money, credit, etc, esp with respect to government revenues and expenditures
2. (Commerce) funds or the provision of funds
3. (Commerce) (plural) funds; financial condition
vb
4. (Banking & Finance) (tr) to provide or obtain funds, capital, or credit for
5. (Banking & Finance) (intr) to manage or secure financial resources
[C14: from Old French, from finer to end, settle by payment]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

fi•nance

(fɪˈnæns, ˈfaɪ næns)

n., v. -nanced, -nanc•ing. n.
1. the management of revenues, esp. those affecting the public, as in the fields of banking and investment.
2. finances, the monetary resources, as of a company, individual, or government.
v.t.
3. to supply with money or capital; obtain money or credit for.
v.i.
4. to raise money or capital needed for financial operations.
[1350–1400; Middle English finaunce < Anglo-French, Middle French finance, derivative of finer to end, settle, pay; see fine2 to end, pay]
fi•nance′a•ble adj.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

Finance


1. the acknowledgment of a bill of exchange, in writing across the back, binding the acceptor to make payment.
2. the bill so endorsed.
a statistician of an insurance company who calculates risks and premiums.
1. the exchange rate between the currencies of different nations.
2. the fee paid to effect an exchange of currency. See also agiotage.
the business of trading or speculating in foreign exchange. Also called agio.
the paying off of a debt in equal installments composed of gradually changing amounts of principal and interest.
an investment that bears a fixed return yearly, for a fixed period or for the life of the recipient.
the treasury, especially of a college. See also learning.
cambistry. — cambist, n.
1. a dealer in bills of exchange.
2. a handbook listing the exchange values of moneys and the weights and measures of many countries.
the branch of economics that studies commercial exchange, especially international money values. Also cambism.
an interest-bearing bond, often issued by corporations, usually unsecured but sometimes with a preferred status over other obligations of the issuer.
1.the condition of being in arrears in payment of a debt.
2. the condition of a debt when overdue. See also law.
1. the state, quality, or condition of being an entrepreneur, an organizer or promoter of business ventures.
2. the duration of a person’s function as an entrepreneur.
one who holds in trust; a trustee or depositary. See also theology.
1. the process of pledging property as security for a debt.
2. a claim made against property so pledged. — hypothecator, n. — hypothecary, adj.
1. the giving of property, usually real property, as security to a creditor for payment of a debt.
2. the deed pledging the security.
1. an annuity, or loan, based on a group of annuities that are shared among several people with the provision that as each person dies his share is spread among those remaining, and the entire amount accrues to the survivor of them all.
2. the members of the group collectively.
3. each member’s total share or annuity. — tontine, adj.
1. the lending of money at excessive interest rates, especially rates above legal limits.
2. the excessive interest rate charged. — usurer, n. — usurious, adj.
language typical of that used on Wall Street and in the financial markets, characterized by use of technical financial terms and arcane stock-market jargon.
-Ologies & -Isms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

Finance

 

(See also INDEBTEDNESS, MONEY, SUBSISTENCE.)

feel the draught See feel a draft, PERCEPTIVENESS.

feel the pinch To sense one’s precarious financial position; to be in a tight spot. In this expression, pinch carries its figurative meaning of an internal twinge of emotional discomfort. The expression most often refers to an economic situation which warrants austerity measures.

grubstake Money advanced in exchange for a share in a venture’s expected return. The term, dating from at least 1863, originally referred to money “staked” to prospectors for “grub” and other provisions in return for a part of the profits from their finds.

The farmer realizes the … plight of the out-of-work who … is left without a grubstake between himself and hunger. (The Atlantic Monthly, March, 1932)

in the black Making a profit; out of debt. This Americanism is so called from the bookkeeping practice of entering profits in black ink. It is synonymous with out of the red.

This time she appeared at the Italian Village, and within two weeks she had pulled it out of the red ink and into the black. (American Mercury, July, 1935)

on a shoestring Dependent upon a very small sum of money; relying on a meager amount of money as capital in a working investment. This colloquial meaning of shoestring has been common in the U.S. since the early part of the century, though precisely how it acquired this sense is unclear. Perhaps shoestring was equivalent to “the cost of a shoestring.”

They accomplished their elegance on a shoestring, too. (Ward County [North Dakota] Independent, July, 1944)

play the papers To gamble. This obsolete Americanism was current in the 19th century.

Poor Kit was in a bad way one hour before we parted. The fact is, you know, he’d bin playin’ the papers (meaning gamblin’) and had lost everything. (De Witt C. Peters, The Life and Adventures of Kit Carson, 1858)

A similar expression with specific reference to horse racing is play the ponies.

prime the pump To attempt to rejuvenate an enterprise by channeling money into it; to try to maintain or stimulate economic activity through government expenditure. A pump is primed or prepared for use by pouring water into it to produce suction. The expression was used figuratively by T. W. Arnold, as cited in Webster’s Third:

This spending has not yet primed the pump.

salt away To save or hold in reserve money or other valuables for future use; to build a nest egg. The figurative meaning of this expression is derived from its literal one, i.e., preserving meat or other perishables by adding salt.

[There is] no one to hinder you from salting away as many millions as you can carry off! (R. W. Chambers, Maids of Paradise, 1902)

sock away To set aside money in a savings account; to save or put money in reserve. This American expression implies that the money is being stowed away for some future investment. It may derive from the days when socks were a common storage receptacle for one’s savings. The phrase appeared in Life, as cited by Webster’s Third:

(He) has socked away very little of his earnings with which to buy a ranch.

Picturesque Expressions: A Thematic Dictionary, 1st Edition. © 1980 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

finance


Past participle: financed
Gerund: financing

Imperative
finance
finance
Present
I finance
you finance
he/she/it finances
we finance
you finance
they finance
Preterite
I financed
you financed
he/she/it financed
we financed
you financed
they financed
Present Continuous
I am financing
you are financing
he/she/it is financing
we are financing
you are financing
they are financing
Present Perfect
I have financed
you have financed
he/she/it has financed
we have financed
you have financed
they have financed
Past Continuous
I was financing
you were financing
he/she/it was financing
we were financing
you were financing
they were financing
Past Perfect
I had financed
you had financed
he/she/it had financed
we had financed
you had financed
they had financed
Future
I will finance
you will finance
he/she/it will finance
we will finance
you will finance
they will finance
Future Perfect
I will have financed
you will have financed
he/she/it will have financed
we will have financed
you will have financed
they will have financed
Future Continuous
I will be financing
you will be financing
he/she/it will be financing
we will be financing
you will be financing
they will be financing
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been financing
you have been financing
he/she/it has been financing
we have been financing
you have been financing
they have been financing
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been financing
you will have been financing
he/she/it will have been financing
we will have been financing
you will have been financing
they will have been financing
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been financing
you had been financing
he/she/it had been financing
we had been financing
you had been financing
they had been financing
Conditional
I would finance
you would finance
he/she/it would finance
we would finance
you would finance
they would finance
Past Conditional
I would have financed
you would have financed
he/she/it would have financed
we would have financed
you would have financed
they would have financed
Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Noun1.finance - the commercial activity of providing funds and capitalfinance - the commercial activity of providing funds and capital
business enterprise, commercial enterprise, business - the activity of providing goods and services involving financial and commercial and industrial aspects; "computers are now widely used in business"
corporate finance - the financial activities of corporation
financing, funding - the act of financing
high finance - large and complex financial transactions (often used with the implication that those individuals or institutions who engage in them are unethical)
investing, investment - the act of investing; laying out money or capital in an enterprise with the expectation of profit
floatation, flotation - financing a commercial enterprise by bond or stock shares
banking - transacting business with a bank; depositing or withdrawing funds or requesting a loan etc.
2.finance - the branch of economics that studies the management of money and other assets
finance - the management of money and credit and banking and investments
economic science, economics, political economy - the branch of social science that deals with the production and distribution and consumption of goods and services and their management
quaestor - any of several public officials of ancient Rome (usually in charge of finance and administration)
capital account - (finance) an account of the net value of a business at a specified date
accumulation - (finance) profits that are not paid out as dividends but are added to the capital base of the corporation
long - holding securities or commodities in expectation of a rise in prices; "is long on coffee"; "a long position in gold"
short - not holding securities or commodities that one sells in expectation of a fall in prices; "a short sale"; "short in cotton"
short - without possessing something at the time it is contractually sold; "he made his fortune by selling short just before the crash"
3.finance - the management of money and credit and banking and investments
banking - engaging in the business of keeping money for savings and checking accounts or for exchange or for issuing loans and credit etc.
management, direction - the act of managing something; "he was given overall management of the program"; "is the direction of the economy a function of government?"
finance - the branch of economics that studies the management of money and other assets
Verb1.finance - obtain or provide money for; "Can we finance the addition to our home?"
seed - help (an enterprise) in its early stages of development by providing seed money
back - support financial backing for; "back this enterprise"
refinance - renew the financing of
fund - convert (short-term floating debt) into long-term debt that bears fixed interest and is represented by bonds
pay - give money, usually in exchange for goods or services; "I paid four dollars for this sandwich"; "Pay the waitress, please"
2.finance - sell or provide on credit
credit - accounting: enter as credit; "We credit your account with $100"
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

finance

verb
1. fund, back, support, pay for, guarantee, float, invest in, underwrite, endow, subsidize, bankroll (U.S.), set up in business, provide security for, provide money for new taxes to finance increased military expenditure
noun
1. funds, backing, money, capital, cash, resources, assets, sponsorship, wonga (slang) businesses seeking finance
2. economics, business, money, banking, accounts, investment, commerce, financial affairs, money management a major player in the world of high finance
plural noun resources, money, funds, capital, cash, affairs, budgeting, assets, cash flow, financial affairs, money management, wherewithal, financial condition Women manage the day-to-day finances.
Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

finance

noun
The monetary resources of a government, organization, or individual.Used in plural:
capital, fund (used in plural), money (often used in plural).
verb
To supply capital to or for:
Informal: bankroll.
Idiom: put up money for.
The American Heritage® Roget's Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
مالماليَّه، تَمْويلموارِد ماليَّهيُمَوِّليُـمَوِّلُ
financefinancovatpeněžní prostředky
finansierefinansieringøkonomibetalefinanser
rahoittaarahoitusrahoitusoppivarainhoitovarat
financijefinancirati
pénzelpénzügy
fjármagnafjármálfjármálavísindi/stjórn
財務資金を調達する
자금자금을 공급하다
finansaifinansininkasfinansinisfinansiškaifinansuoti
finansesfinanses, naudas apgrozījums/līdzekļifinansētfinansu zinātnes
financiepeňažné prostriedky
denarna sredstvadenarne zadevedenarno podpretifinancefinančno stanje
finansierafinansiering
การเงินจัดหาเงินทุนให้
finanse etmekmalî durummali işlermaliyepara durumu
tài chínhtài trợ

finance

[faɪˈnæns]
A. N (gen) → finanzas fpl, asuntos mpl financieros; (= funds) (also finances) → fondos mpl
(the state of) the country's financesla situación económica del país
Minister of FinanceMinistro/a m/f de Economía y Hacienda
B. VT [+ project] → financiar
he stole to finance his drug habitrobaba para costearse su adicción a las drogas
C. CPD [company] → financiero; [page, section] → de economía, de negocios
finance director Ndirector(a) m/f financiero/a
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

finance

[ˈfaɪnæns fɪˈnæns]
n
(= funds) (for project)financement m
to provide finance for sth → financer qch
(= money) → finances fpl
(= financial affairs) → finance f finances
npl
(personal)finances fpl
(public)finances fpl
public finances → les finances publiques
vtfinancerfinance company ncompagnie f financière
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

finance

n
Finanzen pl, → Finanz- or Geldwesen nt; high financeHochfinanz f; to study finance (academically) → Finanzwissenschaft studieren; (as training) → eine Finanzfachschule besuchen
(= money)Geld nt, → (Geld)mittel pl; it’s a question of financedas ist eine Geldfrage or Frage der Finanzen; financesFinanzen pl, → Finanz- or Einkommenslage f; his finances aren’t soundseine Finanzlage ist nicht gesund, seine Finanzen stehen nicht gut

finance

:
finance company
nFinanz(ierungs)gesellschaft f
finance director
nLeiter(in) m(f)der Finanzabteilung
finance plan
nFinanzierungsplan m
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

finance

[faɪˈnæns]
1. n
a. (money management) → finanza; (funds) → fondi mpl, capitale m
Minister of Finance → Ministro delle Finanze
b. (resources) finances nplfinanze fpl
2. vtfinanziare
3. adj (page, section, company) → finanziario/a
Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

finance

(faiˈnӕns) noun
1. (the study or management of) money affairs. He is an expert in finance.finanzas
2. (often in plural) the money one has to spend. The government is worried about the state of the country's finances.fondos, finanzas
verb
to give money for (a plan, business etc). Will the company finance your trip abroad?financiar
fiˈnancial (-ʃəl) adjective
concerning money. financial affairs.financiero
fiˈnancially adverb
económicamente
fiˈnancier (-siə) , ((American) fainanˈsiər) noun
a person who manages large sums of money. financiero
Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

finance

financiación , financiar , finanzas
Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009
References in periodicals archive ?
- Get financed up to 90% of the value of the vehicle.
Increase in the country's car production in the past several years has boosted business in car finance as around 80% car purchases are financed with credits from banks or multifinance companies.
80/20 projects are financed through the issuance of bonds.
Unlike other campaign finance reforms that typically seek to close loopholes through which special interest money makes its way into candidates' coffers, Clean Elections changes the way elections are financed. Candidates who qualify by raising a specified number of small contributions, typically five dollars, receive a grant of public money to run their campaigns.
While insurance companies once offered financed premiums in 12 equal payments, that's rarely done anymore because it does not create equity in the policy--if the insured walks away or cancels the policy, there's nothing left to cover the premium.
Since the Watergate scandal, public interest groups have championed the idea of publicly financed campaigns, in which candidates receive taxpayer money in exchange for adhering to voluntary campaign spending limits.
Consequently, privately financed home care and assisted living developed slowly and private long term care insurance remains stunted.
Unfortunately, no one in Congress has any incentive to change the way campaigns are financed, because once candidates are elected into office, the current system works greatly to their benefit.
Under his leadership, the group has also financed the $160 million San Antonio Convention Center expansion, and the $180 million expansion of the New Orleans Convention Center.
Once an IE is determined to be a conduit (called a "conduit entity" in the regulations), the IRS then has discretion to determine whether the conduit's participation in a conduit financing arrangement "should be disregarded for purposes of section 881."(15) If the conduit is disregarded, "the financing arrangement is recharacterized as a transaction directly between the remaining parties to the financing arrangement (in most cases, the financed entity and the financing entity) for purposes of section 881."(16) In such a case, "a portion of each payment made by the financed entity .
The financing entity may, for example, loan money or license property to the intermediate entity, which will reloan or sublicense the property to a financed entity, usually a related U.S.
Unlike the mergers of the 1960s, which were financed largely by an exchange of securities, acquisitions in the 1980s relied heavily on borrowed funds to pay cash to selling shareholders.

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