Thesaurus Dictionary
Synonyms and antonyms of Unspecified amounts of money in British Thesaurus
Unspecified amounts of money
appropriation (noun)
formal money that must be used in a particular way, according to an official decision
bankroll (noun)
mainly American a supply of money for a particular purpose
blood money (noun)
blood money (noun)
bond (noun)
mainly American an amount of money paid so that someone can leave prison before their trial. Bond is also referred to as bail.
budget (noun)
the amount of money a person or organization has to spend on something
budget (noun)
the amount of money a government has to spend
the amount of money that the British parliament gives to members of the British royal family each year
contribution (noun)
an amount of money or something else of value that you give in order to achieve something or to help make it successful
disbursement (noun)
very formal an amount of money that is paid from a fund (=an amount of money available for a particular purpose)
money that you get without working hard. This expression sometimes shows that you think the money is obtained dishonestly.
entitlement (noun)
every penny ()
all of an amount of money
expenditure (noun)
formal money spent by a government, organization, or person
funding (noun)
money that a government or organization provides for a specific purpose
housekeeping (noun)
money that you use to pay for the things that you need at home, for example food and electricity
independent means (noun)
out-of-pocket expenses (noun)
money that you use to pay for things that you need, but which you can get back from the person or organization that is responsible for paying
pledge (noun)
an amount of money that you have promised to give an organization
pocketbook (noun)
private means (noun)
rebate (noun)
an amount of money that is officially given back to someone
receipts (noun)
business the total amount of money that a business or organization receives in a particular period of time
slush fund (noun)
an amount of money that an organization, business, or political party uses for illegal purposes
slush fund (noun)
an amount of money kept by a business for things that it needs to buy unexpectedly
spend (noun)
British the amount of money that a company or organization spends on something
spending (noun)
money that is spent, especially by a government or a large organization
spending (noun)
relating to the amount of money that is spent by a government or a large organization
sponsorship (noun)
money given to an organization to help to pay for something, often an event
war chest (noun)
mainly journalism money that a political party or a business has available to spend on something such as an election campaign or a business deal
working capital (noun)