Monday-morning quarterback |
(informal) one who evaluates, criticizes, or assesses the decisions or actions of others after the fact. |
Mondays |
on Mondays; each Monday; every Monday. |
monde |
(French) the world. |
mon Dieu |
(French) my God! |
monecious |
variant of monoecious. |
monetarism |
a theory that economic security and growth are dependent upon a controlled growth in the supply of money. |
monetary |
relating to currency or money. [2 definitions] |
monetize |
to make legal for use as money; establish as legal tender. [2 definitions] |
money |
coins or paper notes issued by the government and marked with specific values; legal currency. [4 definitions] |
moneybags |
(informal; used with a sing. verb) a rich person. |
moneychanger |
a person whose business is exchanging currency, usu. at an official rate. [2 definitions] |
money-changing |
the business or act of exchanging money, usu. the currencies of different countries, at an official rate. |
moneyed |
possessing much money; wealthy; rich. [2 definitions] |
money-grubber |
(informal) one who actively desires and pursues the accumulation of as much money as possible. |
moneylender |
one whose business is lending money at interest. |
moneymaker |
a person engaged in or successful at acquiring money. [2 definitions] |
moneymaking |
earning or likely to earn a profit. [2 definitions] |
money market |
the trade in money or funds as they are borrowed or lent short-term by large agencies or the government. |
money-market fund |
a mutual fund whose investments are of a short-term nature and consist of commercial paper or treasury bills, usu. giving a fairly high interest rate. |
money of account |
a monetary denomination or unit used in keeping accounts, esp. one that does not correspond to actual paper money or coin, such as the U.S. mill. |
money order |
an order for the payment of a specific sum of money that is issued for a fee atone bank, post office, or telegraph office, and is payable to another. |