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fund
[fuhnd]
noun
a supply of money or pecuniary resources, as for some purpose.
a fund for his education;
a retirement fund.
supply; stock.
a fund of knowledge;
a fund of jewels.
funds, money immediately available; pecuniary resources.
to be momentarily without funds.
an organization created to administer or manage a fund, as of money invested or contributed for some special purpose.
verb (used with object)
to provide a fund to pay the interest or principal of (a debt).
to convert (general outstanding debts) into a more or less permanent debt, represented by interest-bearing bonds.
to allocate or provide funds for (a program, project, etc.).
fund
/ fʌnd /
noun
a reserve of money, etc, set aside for a certain purpose
a supply or store of something; stock
it exhausted his fund of wisdom
verb
to furnish money to in the form of a fund
to place or store up in a fund
to convert (short-term floating debt) into long-term debt bearing fixed interest and represented by bonds
to provide a fund for the redemption of principal or payment of interest of
to accumulate a fund for the discharge of (a recurrent liability)
to fund a pension plan
to invest (money) in government securities See also funds
Other Word Forms
- nonfunded adjective
- overfund verb (used with object)
- prefund verb (used with object)
- underfund verb (used with object)
- underfunded adjective
- underfunding noun
- funder noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of fund1
Example Sentences
It said the funding would help "transform the building into a modern, energy-efficient, year-round arts venue at the heart of the community".
We took steps to stabilise the broken foundations of local government and deliver the first genuinely fair funding review and the first multi-year settlement for a decade.
“She is very resourceful,” Dockery agrees of Mary’s tenacity and ability to imagine a new future for Downton, particularly new ways of funding the estate.
Rather than fund and build it, the VA contracted the work to affordable housing developers who brought outside funding through time-consuming tax credits.
In previous rounds of funding, the city doled out money based on the number of units in a project.
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