unmoneyed
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Unmoneyed — Un*mon eyed, a. Destitute of money; not rich. [Written also {unmonied}.] Shenstone. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
unmoneyed — index bankrupt, destitute, impecunious, poor (underprivileged) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
unmoneyed — “+ adjective : not having money : penniless the unmoneyed young man who has married the heiress Henry James †1916 … Useful english dictionary
unmoneyed — un·moneyed … English syllables
unmonied — Unmoneyed Un*mon eyed, a. Destitute of money; not rich. [Written also {unmonied}.] Shenstone. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Bowie, David — orig. David Robert Jones born Jan. 8, 1947, London, Eng. British rock singer. In the mid 1960s Bowie sang in a number of bands in his native London. He changed his name in 1966 to avoid confusion with the lead singer of the Monkees. His first hit … Universalium
bankrupt — bank·rupt 1 / baŋ ˌkrəpt/ n: a debtor (as an individual or organization) whose property is subject to administration under the bankruptcy laws for the benefit of the debtor s creditors was adjudicated a bankrupt see also debtor bankrupt 2 adj:… … Law dictionary
destitute — I adjective bankrupt, beggarly, bereft, depleted, deprived, distressed, impecunious, impoverished, indigent, inops, insolvent, lacking funds, moneyless, necessitous, needful, needy, out of money, penniless, poor, poverty stricken, reduced in… … Law dictionary
impecunious — I adjective bankrupt, beggared, beggarly, broke, cleaned out, destitute, distressed, embarrassed, flat, flat broke, hard up, impoverished, in need, in straitened circumstances, in the red, in want, indigent, insolvent, necessitous, needy, not… … Law dictionary
poor — I (inferior in quality) adjective bad, badly made, barely passable, base, beggarly, below par, below standard, cheap, coarse, common, contemptible, crude, defective, deficient, dubious, faulty, flimsy, gimcrack, imperfect, inadequate, inartistic … Law dictionary