Money Vocabulary
Cash – money in the form of notes and coins, rather than cheques or credit cards.
Sentence – Cash was taken during a burglary of the apartment.
Debit – (a record of) money taken out of a bank account.
Sentence – Please authorise us to debit your account and, where possible, give a day-time telephone number in case of query.
Low-Risk Investment – investments that are inherently safer than their counterparts.
Sentence – Therefore, the Bond Fund is a more suitable for ordinary investors in low-risk investment products.
Credit Card – a small plastic card that can be used as a method of payment, the money being taken from you at a later time.
Sentence – This credit card allows you to withdraw up to £200 a day from cash dispensers.
Cheque – a printed form, used instead of money, to make payments from your bank account.
Sentence – The cheque was only deposited yesterday, so it hasn’t been cleared yet.
Annual Fee – a yearly charge by banks and financial institutions to customers for use of their credit cards.
Sentence – The patentee shall pay an annual fee beginning with the year in which the patent right was granted.
Tuition Fees – money that a student pays to a university for their teaching.
Sentence – Many students will not have to pay tuition fees if their financial situation is below a certain level.
Poverty – the condition of being extremely poor.
Sentence – Poverty shows us who are our friends and who are our enemies.
Bank Statement – a record of the money put into and removed from a bank account.
Sentence – It isn’t just correcting my bank statement or phone bill.
Money Management – the activity of organizing and investing your own or someone else’s money.
Sentence – Money Management contains full details of the performance of a wide range of managed and single currency funds.
Current Account – a bank account that you can take money from at any time and that usually earns little or no interest.
Sentence – Switch to an interest-paying current account and stay in credit. Most banks and larger building societies now offer these accounts.
Interest Rate – the interest percent that a bank or other financial company charges you when you borrow money, or the interest percent it pays you when you keep money in an account.
Sentence – An interest rate reduction is needed to get more money flowing and create jobs.
Deposit – a payment, especially into a bank account.
Sentence – Passengers who cancel their reservations will forfeit their deposit.
Student Account – simply bank accounts made for those in higher education.
Sentence – The bank has some special facilities for student account.
Withdraw – to take money out of an account.
Sentence – I’d like to withdraw 1000 dollars from my savings account and put it in my cheque account.
Mortgage – an agreement that allows you to borrow money from a bank or similar organization, especially in order to buy a house, or the amount of money itself.
Sentence – People who default on their mortgage repayments may have their home repossessed.
Grace Period – extra time you are given to pay money you owe without losing something or paying an additional amount.
Sentence – A grace period of five years is granted to buses registered before July 1, 1997.
In Advance – a method of doing business in which a customer must send their payment for goods at the same time as they send their order.
Sentence – Customers are advised to make seat reservations well in advance.
Budget Deficit – the difference between a government’s income and how much it spends.
Sentence – We hope these reforms will shrink the nation’s budget deficit.
Retail Voucher – a document that entitles the owner to purchase goods or services with it.
Sentence – Sam won a retail voucher of $100 in a lottery.
Coupon – a piece of paper that can be used to get something without paying for it, or at a reduced price.
Sentence – I’ve kept the special coupon from the box of washing powder, so that I can get my next box cheaper.