| We just won an all-expens e- paid trip to new york city. | เราเพิ่งได้รางวัลงดเว้นค่าใช้จ่ายในการเดินทางทั้งหมด ไปที่นิวยอร์คซิตี้ Jacksonville (2010) |
| expendable | (adj) suitable to be expended, Ant. unexpendable |
| expendable | (adj) (used of funds) remaining after taxes, Syn. spendable, Example: spendable income |
| expending | (n) the act of spending money for goods or services, Syn. expenditure |
| expense | (n) amounts paid for goods and services that may be currently tax deductible (as opposed to capital expenditures), Syn. disbursement, disbursal |
| expense | (n) a detriment or sacrifice, Example: at the expense of |
| expense | (n) money spent to perform work and usually reimbursed by an employer, Example: he kept a careful record of his expenses at the meeting |
| expense | (v) reduce the estimated value of something, Syn. write down, write off, Example: For tax purposes you can write off the laser printer |
| expense account | (n) an account to which salespersons or executives can charge travel and entertainment expenses, Syn. travel and entertainment account |
| expense record | (n) a written record of money spent |
| expensive | (adj) high in price or charging high prices, Ant. cheap, Example: expensive clothes; an expensive shop |
| Expend | v. i. They go elsewhere to enjoy and to expend. Macaulay. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Expend | v. t. If my death might make this island happy . . . |
| expended | adj. nonexistent or unavailable as a consequence of use or exchange. |
| Expenditor | n. [ LL. ] (O. Eng. Law) A disburser; especially, one of the disbursers of taxes for the repair of sewers. Mozley & W. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Expenditure | n. Our expenditure purchased commerce and conquest. Burke. [ 1913 Webster ] The receipts and expenditures of this extensive country. A. Hamilton. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Expense | n. [ L. expensa (sc. pecunia), or expensum, fr. expensus, p. p. of expendere. See Expend. ] Husband nature's riches from expense. Shak. [ 1913 Webster ] Courting popularity at his party's expense. Brougham. [ 1913 Webster ] And moan the expense of many a vanished sight. Spenser. [ 1913 Webster ]
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| Expensefull | a. Full of expense; costly; chargeable. [ R. ] Sir H. Wotton. -- |
| Expenseless | a. Without cost or expense. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Expensive | a. War is expensive, and peace desirable. Burke. [ 1913 Webster ] An active, expensive, indefatigable goodness. Sprat. [ 1913 Webster ] The idle and expensive are dangerous. Sir W. Temple. -- |