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English-Thai Dictionary

Bank for Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives

N ธนาคารเพื่อการเกษตรและสหกรณ์การเกษตร  tha-na-kan-phuea-kan-ka-sed-lae-sa-ha-kon-kan-ka-sed

 

Bank of Thailand

N ธนาคารแห่งประเทศไทย  tha-na-kan-haeng-pra-thed-thai

 

bank

N ตลิ่ง  ชายฝั่ง  เขื่อน  ฝั่ง  embankment levee ta-ling

 

bank

N ทิว ยาว  เทื อก  แถว  แนว  thio yao

 

bank

N ที่ ลาดชัน  การ ลาดเอียง  ti-lad-chan

 

bank

N ที่ เก็บข้อมูล  อาหาร หรือ เลือด เพื่อ ใช้ ตอน ฉุกเฉิน  สิ่ง ที่ สำรอง เอา ไว้  ti-keb-khor-mun-ar-han-rue-luead-phuea-chai-ton-chuk-chon

 

bank

N ธนาคาร  tha-na-kan

 

bank

N หาด ตื้นๆ (ใต้ น้ำทะเล  ที่ ตื้นเขิน  had-tuen-tuen

 

bank

N เงิน ที่ ได้ จาก การ เล่น การพนัน  เงิน พนัน  ngoen-ti-dai-jak-kan-len-kan-pha-nan

 

bank

VT ทำให้ เอียง (เครื่องบิน  เอียง เล็กน้อย  tham-hai-iang

 

bank

VT สะสม  sa-som

 

bank

VT เอา มาก อง  ทำให้ เป็นกอง  aol-ma-kong

 

bank

VT เอา เงินฝาก ธนาคาร  เอา เงิน เข้า ธนาคาร  deposit withdraw aol-ngoen-fak-tha-na-kan

 

bank

VT ใส่ ขี้เถ้า ลง ใน ไฟ เพื่อให้ ความร้อน ลดลง และ ไหม้ ช้า  sai-khi-thao-long-nai-fai-phuea-hai-khwam-ron-lod-long-lae-mai-cha

 

bank balance

N ยอดเงิน เหลือ ใน บัญชี  yod-ngoen-luea-nai-ban-chi

 

bank bill

N ธนบัตร  bank note tha-na-bad

 

bank draft

N ใบสั่งจ่าย เงิน ของ ธนาคาร  ดร๊าฟ  bai-sang-jai-ngoen-khong-tha-na-kan

 

bank on

PHRV พึ่งพา  เชื่อถือ ใน  เชื่อใจ ใน  depend on phueng-pha

 

bank statement

N รายการ เงินฝาก ถอน ใน บัญชีเงินฝาก  statement rai-kan-ngoen-fak-thon-nai-ban-chi-ngoen-fak

 

bank up

PHRV ทำให้ เป็นกอง  tham-hai-pen-kong

 

bank with

PHRV ฝากเงิน ธนาคาร  ฝากเงิน ไว้ กับ  fak-ngen-tha-na-kan

 

bankable

ADJ ซึ่ง เก็บเงิน ไว้ ให้ บางคน  sueng-keb-ngen-wai-hai-bang-kon

 

bankbook

N สมุดเงินฝาก ของ ธนาคาร  passbook sa-mud-ngen-fak-khong-tha-na-khan

 

banker

N นายธนาคาร  financier nai-tha-na-khan

 

banker

N เจ้ามือ  เจ้ามือ การพนัน  jao-mue

 

banker

N แท่น ทำงาน  แท่น แบบ ของ งาน แกะสลัก หิน  หรือ ก่ออิฐ  thaen-tham-ngan

 

banking

N การธนาคาร  kan-tha-na-khan

 

banknote

N ธนบัตร  bank bill tha-na-bad

 

bankroll

N ม้วน ธนบัตร  muan-tha-na-bad

 

bankroll

N เงินทุน สำหรับ โครงการ หนึ่งๆ  ngen-tun-sam-rab-khrong-kan-nueng-nueng

 

bankroll

VT เตรียม เงินทุน สำหรับ โครงการ หนึ่งๆ  triam-ngen-tun-sam-rab-khrong-kan-nueng-nueng

 

bankrupt

ADJ ล้มละลาย  เจ๊ง หมดตัว  lom-la-lai

 

bankrupt

N บุคคล ล้มละลาย  buk-kan-lom-la-lai

 

bankrupt

VT ทำให้ ล้มละลาย  เจ๊ง หมดตัว  pauperize tham-hai-lom-la-lai

 

bankruptcy

N การล้มละลาย  insolvency kan-lom-la-lai

 

Webster's 1828 Dictionary

BANK

n.[Bank and bench are radically the same word. The sense is, that which is set, laid or extended. Applied to a mass of earth, it is a collection, that which is thrown or laid together. ] 1. A mound, pile or ridge of earth, raised above the surrounding plain, either as a defense or for other purposes. 2 Samuel 2 :15.
2. Any steep acclivity, whether rising from a river, a lake, or the sea, or forming the side of a ravine, or the steep side of a hillock on a plain. When we speak of the earth in general adjoining a lake or the sea, we use the word shore; but a particular steep acclivity on the side of a lake, river or the sea, is called a bank.
3. A bench, or a bench of rowers, in a galley; so called from their seat.
Placed on their banks, the lusty Trojans sweep.
4. By analogy, a collection or stock of money, deposited, by a number of persons, for a particular use; that is, an aggregate of particulars, or a fund; as, to establish a bank, that is a joint fund.
5. The place where a collection of money is deposited; a common repository of the money of individuals or of companies; also a house used for a bank.
6. A company of persons concerned in a bank, whether a private association, or an incorporated company; the stockholders of a bank, or their representatives, the directors, acting in their corporate capacity.
7. An elevation, or rising ground, in the sea; called also flats, shoals, shelves or shallows. These may rise to the surface of the water or near to it; but the word bank signifies also elevated ground at the bottom of the sea, when many fathoms below the surface, as the banks of Newfoundland.

 

BANK

v.t. 1. To raise a mound or dyke; to inclose, defend or fortify with a bank; as, to bank a house.
2. To pass by the banks of.
As I have bank'd their towns. [Not in use. ]
3. To lay up or deposit money in a bank. [Little used. ]

 

BANKABLE

a.Receivable at a bank, as bills; or discountable, as notes. [Of recent origin. ]

 

BANK-BILL, BANK-NOTE

n.A promissory note, issued by a banking company, signed by their President and countersigned by the Cashier, payable to the bearer in gold or silver at the bank, on demand. If payable to order, the note is called a post-note.

 

BANKED

pp. Raised in a ridge or mound of earth; inclosed, or fortified with a bank.

 

BANKER

n.One who keeps a bank; one who trafficks in money, receives and remits money, negotiates bills of exchange, etc. 2. A vessel employed in the codfishery on the banks of Newfoundland.

 

BANKING

ppr. Raising a mound or bank; inclosing with a bank. When we speak of restraining water, we usually call it banking; when we speak of defending the land, we call it imbanking.

 

BANKING

n.The business or employment of a banker; the business of establishing a common fund for lending money, discounting notes, issuing bills, receiving deposits, collecting the money on notes deposited, negotiating bills of exchange, etc.

 

BANKRUPT

n.[Eng. rout, defeat. This may signify bench-broken, or bank-broken; most probably the latter, referring to the fund or stock. The last syllable is the Latin ruptus contracted; Norm. roupt, rous, broken. ] 1. A trader who secretes himself, or does certain other acts tending to defraud his creditors.
2. In a less technical sense, a trader who fails or becomes unable to pay his just debts; an insolvent trader. In strictness, no person but a trader can be a bankrupt. Bankruptcy is applied to merchants and traders; insolvency, to other persons.

 

BANKRUPT

a.Having committed acts of bankruptcy; unable to pay just debts; insolvent.

 

BANKRUPT

v.t.To break one in trade; to make insolvent.

 

BANKRUPTCY

n.The state of being a bankrupt, or insolvent; inability to pay all debts. 2. The act of becoming a bankrupt; the act of rendering one's self a bankrupt, as by absconding, or otherwise; failure in trade.

 

BANKRUPTED

pp. Rendered insolvent.

 

BANKRUPTING

ppr. Breaking in trade; rendering insolvent.

 

BANKRUPT-LAW

n.A law, which, upon a bankrupt's surrendering all his property to commissioners for the benefit of his creditors, discharges him from the payment of his debts, and all liability to arrest or suit for the same, and secures his future acquired property from a liability to the payment of his past debts.

 

BANKRUPT-SYSTEM

n.A system of laws and legal proceedings in regard to bankrupts and their property.

 

BANK-STOCK

n.A share or shares in the capital stock of a bank.

 

Webster's 1913 Dictionary

BANK

Bank, n. Etym: [OE. banke; akin to E. bench, and prob. of Scand.origin. ; cf. Icel. bakki. See Bench. ]

 

1. A mound, pile, or ridge of earth, raised above the surrounding level; hence, anything shaped like a mound or ridge of earth; as, a bank of clouds; a bank of snow. They cast up a bank against the city. 2 Sam. xx. 15.

 

2. A steep acclivity, as the slope of a hill, or the side of a ravine.

 

3. The margin of a watercourse; the rising ground bordering a lake, river, or sea, or forming the edge of a cutting, or other hollow. Tiber trembled underneath her banks. Shak.

 

4. An elevation, or rising ground, under the sea; a shoal, shelf, or shallow; as, the banks of Newfoundland.

 

5. (Mining ) (a ) The face of the coal at which miners are working. (b ) A deposit of ore or coal, worked by excavations above water level. (c ) The ground at the top of a shaft; as, ores are brought to bank. Bank beaver (Zoöl.), the otter. [Local, U.S.] -- Bank swallow, a small American and European swallow (Clivicola riparia ) that nests in a hole which it excavates in a bank.

 

BANK

Bank, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Banked (p. pr. & vb. n. Banking. ]

 

1. To raise a mound or dike about; to inclose, defend, or fortify with a bank; to embank. "Banked well with earth. " Holland.

 

2. To heap or pile up; as, to bank sand.

 

3. To pass by the banks of. [Obs. ] Shak. To bank a fire, To bank up a fire, to cover the coals or embers with ashes or cinders, thus keeping the fire low but alive.

 

BANK

Bank, n. Etym: [Prob. fr. F. banc. Of German origin, and akin to E.bench. See Bench. ]

 

1. A bench, as for rowers in a galley; also, a tier of oars. Placed on their banks, the lusty Trojan sweep Neptune's smooth face, and cleave the yielding deep. Waller.

 

2. (Law ) (a ) The bench or seat upon which the judges sit. (b ) The regular term of a court of law, or the full court sitting to hear arguments upon questions of law, as distinguished from a sitting at Nisi Prius, or a court held for jury trials. See Banc. Burrill.

 

3. (Printing )

 

Defn: A sort of table used by printers.

 

4. (Music )

 

Defn: A bench, or row of keys belonging to a keyboard, as in an organ. Knight.

 

BANK

Bank, n. Etym: [F. banque, It. banca, orig. bench, table, counter, of German origin, and akin to E. bench; cf. G. bank bench, OHG. banch. See Bench, and cf. Banco, Beach. ]

 

1. An establishment for the custody, loan, exchange, or issue, of money, and for facilitating the transmission of funds by drafts or bills of exchange; an institution incorporated for performing one or more of such functions, or the stockholders (or their representatives, the directors ), acting in their corporate capacity.

 

2. The building or office used for banking purposes.

 

3. A fund from deposits or contributions, to be used in transacting business; a joint stock or capital. [Obs. ] Let it be no bank or common stock, but every man be master of his own money. Bacon.

 

4. (Gaming )

 

Defn: The sum of money or the checks which the dealer or banker has as a fund, from which to draw his stakes and pay his losses.

 

5. In certain games, as dominos, a fund of pieces from which the players are allowed to draw. Bank credit, a credit by which a person who has give -- Bank of deposit, a bank which receives money for safe keeping. -- Bank of issue, a bank which issues its own notes payable to bearer.

 

BANK

BANK Bank, v. t.

 

Defn: To deposit in a bank.

 

BANK

BANK Bank, v. i.

 

1. To keep a bank; to carry on the business of a banker.

 

2. To deposit money in a bank; to have an account with a banker.

 

BANKABLE

BANKABLE Bank "a *ble, a.

 

Defn: Receivable at a bank.

 

BANK BILL

BANK BILL Bank " bill `.

 

1. In America (and formerly in England ), a promissory note of a bank payable to the bearer on demand, and used as currency; a bank note.

 

2. In England, a note, or a bill of exchange, of a bank, payable to order, and usually at some future specified time. Such bills are negotiable, but form, in the strict sense of the term, no part of the currency.

 

BANK BOOK

BANK BOOK Bank " book `.

 

Defn: A book kept by a depositor, in which an officer of a bank enters the debits and credits of the depositor's account with the bank.

 

BANK DISCOUNT

BANK DISCOUNT Bank discount.

 

Defn: A sum equal to the interest at a given rate on the principal (face ) of a bill or note from the time of discounting until it becomes due.

 

BANKER

BANKER Bank "er, n.Etym: [See the nouns Bank and the verbs derived from them. ]

 

1. One who conducts the business of banking; one who, individually, or as a member of a company, keeps an establishment for the deposit or loan of money, or for traffic in money, bills of exchange, etc.

 

2. A money changer. [Obs. ]

 

3. The dealer, or one who keeps the bank in a gambling house.

 

4. A vessel employed in the cod fishery on the banks of Newfoundland. Grabb. J. Q. Adams.

 

5. A ditcher; a drain digger. [Prov. Eng. ]

 

6. The stone bench on which masons cut or square their work. Weale.

 

BANKERESS

BANKERESS Bank "er *ess, n.

 

Defn: A female banker. Thackeray.

 

BANKING

BANKING Bank "ing, n.

 

Defn: The business of a bank or of a banker. Banking house, an establishment or office in which, or a firm by whom, banking is done.

 

BANK NOTE

BANK NOTE Bank " note `.

 

1. A promissory note issued by a bank or banking company, payable to bearer on demand.

 

Note: In the United States popularly called a bank bill.

 

2. Formerly, a promissory note made by a banker, or banking company, payable to a specified person at a fixed date; a bank bill. See Bank bill, 2. [Obs. ]

 

3. A promissory note payable at a bank.

 

BANKRUPT

Bank "rupt, n. Etym: [F. banqueroute, fr. It. bancarotta bankruptcy; banca bank (fr. OHG. banch, G. bank, bench ) + rotta broken, fr. L. ruptus, p.p. of rumpere to break. At Florence, it is said, the bankrupt had his bench ( i.e., money table ) broken. See 1st Bank, and Rupture, n.]

 

1. (Old Eng. Low )

 

Defn: A trader who secretes himself, or does certain other acts tending to defraud his creditors. Blackstone.

 

2. A trader who becomes unable to pay his debts; an insolvent trader; popularly, any person who is unable to pay his debts; an insolvent person. M

 

3. (Law )

 

Defn: A person who, in accordance with the terms of a law relating to bankruptcy, has been judicially declared to be unable to meet his liabilities.

 

Note: In England, until the year 1861 none but a "trader " could be made a bankrupt; a non-trader failing to meet his liabilities being an "insolvent ". But this distinction was abolished by the Bankruptcy Act of 1861. The laws of 1841 and 1867 of the United States relating to bankruptcy applied this designation bankrupt to others besides those engaged in trade.

 

BANKRUPT

BANKRUPT Bank "rupt, a.

 

1. Being a bankrupt or in a condition of bankruptcy; unable to pay, or legally discharged from paying, one's debts; as, a bankrupt merchant.

 

2. Depleted of money; not having the means of meeting pecuniary liabilities; as, a bankrupt treasury.

 

3. Relating to bankrupts and bankruptcy.

 

4. Destitute of, or wholly wanting (something once possessed, or something one should possess ). "Bankrupt in gratitude. " Sheridan. Bankrupt law, a law by which the property of a person who is unable or unwilling to pay his debts may be taken and distributed to his creditors, and by which a person who has made a full surrender of his property, and is free from fraud, may be discharged from the legal obligation of his debts. See Insolvent, a.

 

BANKRUPT

Bank "rupt, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Bankrupted; p. pr. & vb. n.Bankrupting. ]

 

Defn: To make bankrupt; to bring financial ruin upon; to impoverish.

 

BANKRUPTCY

Bank "rupt *cy, n.; pl. Bankruptcies (

 

1. The state of being actually or legally bankrupt.

 

2. The act or process of becoming a bankrupt.

 

3. Complete loss; -- followed by of.

 

BANKSIDE

BANKSIDE Bank "side `, n.

 

Defn: The slope of a bank, especially of the bank of a steam.

 

BANK-SIDED

BANK-SIDED Bank "-sid `ed, a. (Naut. )

 

Defn: Having sides inclining inwards, as a ship; -- opposed to wall- sided.

 

BANK SWALLOW

BANK SWALLOW Bank " swal "low.

 

Defn: See under 1st Bank, n.

 

New American Oxford Dictionary

bank

bank 1 |baNGk bæŋk | noun 1 the land alongside or sloping down to a river or lake: willows lined the bank. 2 a slope, mass, or mound of a particular substance: a bank of clouds | a bank of snow. an elevation in the seabed or a riverbed; a mudbank or sandbank. a transverse slope given to a road, railroad, or sports track to enable vehicles or runners to maintain speed around a curve. the sideways tilt of an aircraft when turning in flight: flying with small amounts of bank. 3 a set or series of similar things, esp. electrical or electronic devices, grouped together in rows: the DJ had big banks of lights and speakers on either side of his console. a tier of oars: the early ships had only twenty-five oars in each bank. 4 the cushion of a pool table: [ as modifier ] : a bank shot. verb [ with obj. ] 1 heap (a substance ) into a mass or mound: the rain banked the soil up behind the gate | snow was banked in humps at the roadside. [ no obj. ] rise or form into a mass or mound: purple clouds banked up over the hills. heap (a fire ) with tightly packed fuel so that it burns slowly: she could have made a fire and banked it with dirt. edge or surround with a ridge or row of something: steps banked with pots of chrysanthemums. 2 (of an aircraft or vehicle ) tilt or cause to tilt sideways in making a turn: [ no obj. ] : the plane banked as if to return to the airport | [ with obj. ] : I banked the aircraft steeply and turned. [ no obj. ] build (a road, railroad, or sports track ) higher at the outer edge of a bend to facilitate fast cornering. 3 (in pool and other games ) play (a ball ) so that it rebounds off a surface such as a backboard or cushion. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old Norse bakki, of Germanic origin; related to bench. The senses set of similar things in sloping rows and tier of oars are from French banc, of the same ultimate origin.

 

bank

bank 2 |bæŋk baNGk | noun a financial establishment that invests money deposited by customers, pays it out when required, makes loans at interest, and exchanges currency: I paid the money straight into my bank. a stock of something available for use when required: a blood bank | building a bank of test items is the responsibility of teachers. a site or receptacle where something may be stored: the computer's memory bank. (the bank ) the store of money or tokens held by the banker in some gambling or board games. the person holding this store; the banker. Brit. a site or receptacle where something may be deposited for recycling: a paper bank. verb [ with obj. ] deposit (money or valuables ) in a bank: I banked the check. [ no obj. ] have an account at a particular bank: he did not bank with the old family banks. informal (esp. of a competitor in a game or race ) win or earn (a sum of money ): he banked $100,000 for a hole-in-one. store (something, esp. blood, tissue, or sperm ) for future use: the sperm is banked or held in storage for the following spring. PHRASES break the bank (in gambling ) win more money than is held by the bank. [ usu. with negative ] informal cost more than one can afford: Christmas need not break the bank. PHRASAL VERBS bank on base one's hopes or confidence on: they can bank on my winning 25 games next year. ORIGIN late 15th cent. (originally denoting a money dealer's table ): from French banque or Italian banca, from medieval Latin banca, bancus, of Germanic origin; related to bank 1 and bench .

 

bankable

bank a ble |ˈbaNGkəbəl ˈbæŋkəbəl | adjective (esp. in the entertainment industry ) certain to bring profit and success: he needed some bankable names to star in the film. reliable: a bankable assurance. DERIVATIVES bank a bil i ty |ˌbaNGkəˈbilitē |noun

 

bank account

bank ac count noun an arrangement made with a bank whereby one may deposit and withdraw money and in some cases be paid interest.

 

bank balance

bank bal ance |bæŋk ˈbæləns | noun the amount of money held in a bank account at a given moment.

 

bank barn

bank barn noun a barn built into a hill or other sloped ground.

 

bank bill

bank bill noun 1 Brit. a bill of exchange drawn by one bank on another. 2 another term for banknote.

 

bank book

bank book noun another term for passbook.

 

bank card

bank card |ˈbæŋk ˌkɑrd | noun a plastic card issued by a bank which enables a customer to withdraw money at an automated teller machine.

 

bank discount

bank dis count noun interest computed on the face value of a loan and deducted in advance from the loan by the lending bank.

 

bank draft

bank draft |ˈbæŋk ˌdræft | noun a check drawn by a bank on its own funds in another bank.

 

banker

bank er |ˈbaNGkər ˈbæŋkər | noun an officer or owner of a bank or group of banks. the person running the table, controlling play, or acting as dealer in some gambling or board games. ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from French banquier, from banque (see bank 2 ).

 

banker

banker 2 |ˈbaŋkə | noun 1 a boat employed in cod fishing off Newfoundland. a Newfoundland fisherman. 2 Austral. /NZ informal a river flooded to the top of its banks. 3 an additional locomotive used to assist a train in ascending an incline. 4 a bench at which a stonemason works.

 

banker's hours

bank er's hours plural noun short working hours (in reference to the typical opening hours of a bank in former times ).

 

banker's order

banker's order noun Brit. a standing order to a bank to make specified payments from one's account to a particular recipient.

 

Bank for International Settlements

Bank for International Settlements a bank founded in 1930 to promote the cooperation of central banks and to provide facilities for international financial operations. It is located at Basle in Switzerland.

 

Bankhead, Tallulah

Bank head, Tallulah |ˈbaNGkˌhed ˈbæŋkhɛd | (1903 –68 ), US actress noted for her uninhibited public persona, rich laugh, and harsh drawl. Her best-known movie appearance was in Alfred Hitchcock's Lifeboat (1944 ).

 

bank holiday

bank hol i day |ˈˌbæŋk ˈhɑləˌdeɪ | noun Brit. a day on which banks are officially closed, observed as a public holiday.

 

banking

bank ing |ˈbaNGkiNG bæŋkɪŋ | noun the business conducted or services offered by a bank: with this account, you are entitled to free banking | a 23 -year career in banking.

 

banking

banking 2 |ˈbaŋkɪŋ | noun an embankment or artificial bank.

 

bank machine

bank ma chine noun another term for automated teller machine.

 

bank manager

bank man |ager noun a person in charge of a local branch of a bank.

 

banknote

bank note |ˈbaNGkˌnōt ˈbæŋkˌnoʊt |(also bank note ) noun a piece of paper money, constituting a central bank's promissory note to pay a stated sum to the bearer on demand: is the $1 bill the only banknote with George Washington's picture on it?

 

Bank of England

Bank of Eng |land the central bank of England and Wales, which issues legal tender, manages the national debt, administers exchange rate policy, and since 1997 sets interest rates. Founded in 1694, it was nationalized in 1946.

 

bank rate

bank rate noun the rate of discount set by a central bank.

 

bankroll

bank roll |ˈbaNGkˌrōl ˈbæŋkˌroʊl | noun a roll of paper money. financial resources: his bankroll allowed him to run campaigns all over the U.S. verb [ with obj. ] informal support (a person, organization, or project ) financially: the project is bankrolled by wealthy expatriates.

 

bankrupt

bank rupt |ˈbaNGkˌrəpt, -rəpt ˈbæŋkrəpt | adjective 1 (of a person or organization ) declared in law unable to pay outstanding debts: the company was declared bankrupt | his father went bankrupt and the family had to sell their home. impoverished or depleted: a bankrupt country with no natural resources. 2 completely lacking in a particular quality or value: their cause is morally bankrupt. noun a person judged by a court to be insolvent, whose property is taken and disposed of for the benefit of creditors. verb [ with obj. ] reduce (a person or organization ) to bankruptcy: the strike nearly bankrupted the union. ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from Italian banca rotta broken bench, from banca (see bank 2 ) and rompere to break. The change in the ending was due to association with Latin rupt- broken.

 

bankruptcy

bank rupt cy |ˈbaNGkˌrəp (t )sē, -rəp (t )sē ˈbæŋkrəp (t )si | noun ( pl. bankruptcies ) 1 the state of being bankrupt: many companies were facing bankruptcy | a series of bankruptcies and scandals | [ as modifier ] : bankruptcy proceedings. 2 the state of being completely lacking in a particular quality or value: the moral bankruptcy of turning away desperate people.

 

bankruptcy order

bank |rupt ¦cy order noun English Law an order of the court declaring a person bankrupt and placing their affairs under the control of a receiver or trustee. Compare with receiving order.

 

Banks, Ernie

Banks, Ernie |baNGks bæŋks | (1931 –), US baseball player; full name Ernest Banks; known as Mr. Cub. He played shortstop, then first base, for the Chicago Cubs from 1953 until 1971. Baseball Hall of Fame (1977 ).

 

Banks, Gordon

Banks |baŋks | (b.1937 ), English footballer. An outstanding goalkeeper, he played in the 1966 and 1970 World Cups. In 1972 a serious eye injury sustained in a car crash effectively ended his playing career.

 

Banks, Sir Joseph

Banks, Sir Joseph |ˈbæŋks baNGks | (1743 –1820 ), English botanist. He accompanied Captain James Cook on his first voyage to the Pacific.

 

banksia

bank si a |ˈbaNGksēə ˈbæŋksiə | noun an evergreen Australian shrub that typically has narrow, leathery leaves and spikes of bottlebrushlike flowers. [Genus Banksia, family Proteaceae. ] ORIGIN modern Latin, named after Sir Joseph Banks, Sir Joseph .

 

banksia rose

bank |sia rose noun a small-flowered climbing rose native to China. Rosa banksiae, family Rosaceae.

 

bank statement

bank state ment |bæŋk ˈsteɪtmənt | noun a printed record of the balance in a bank account and the amounts that have been paid into it and withdrawn from it, issued periodically to the holder of the account.

 

bank swallow

bank swal low noun another term for sand martin.

 

bank vole

bank vole noun a common reddish-brown Eurasian vole that lives in woodland and scrub. [Clethrionomys glareolus, family Muridae. ]

 

Oxford Dictionary

bank

bank 1 |baŋk | noun 1 the land alongside or sloping down to a river or lake: willows lined the bank of the stream. 2 a long, high mass or mound of a particular substance: a grassy bank | a bank of snow. an elevation in the seabed or a riverbed; a mudbank or sandbank. a transverse slope given to a road, railway, or sports track to enable vehicles or runners to maintain speed round a curve. [ mass noun ] the sideways tilt of an aircraft when turning in flight: a rather steep angle of bank. 3 a set of similar things, especially electrical or electronic devices, grouped together in rows: the DJ had big banks of lights and speakers on either side of his console. a tier of oars. 4 the cushion of a pool table. verb [ with obj. ] 1 heap (a substance ) into a mass or mound: the rain banked the soil up behind the gate | snow was banked in humps at the roadside. [ no obj. ] form into a mass or mound: purple clouds banked up over the hills. heap up (a fire ) with tightly packed fuel so that it burns slowly: she banked up the fire. edge or surround with a ridge or row of something: steps banked with pots of chrysanthemums. 2 (with reference to an aircraft or vehicle ) tilt or cause to tilt sideways in making a turn: [ no obj. ] : the plane banked as if to return to the airport | [ with obj. ] : I banked the aircraft steeply and turned. 3 build (a road, railway, or sports track ) higher at the outer edge of a bend to facilitate fast cornering. 4 (often as noun banking ) Brit. (of a locomotive ) provide additional power for (a train ) in ascending an incline. 5 (of an angler ) succeed in landing (a fish ): it was the biggest rainbow trout that had ever been banked. 6 N. Amer. (in pool ) play (a ball ) so that it rebounds off a surface such as a cushion. ORIGIN Middle English: from Old Norse bakki, of Germanic origin; related to bench. The senses set of things in rows and tier of oars are from French banc, of the same ultimate origin.

 

bank

bank 2 |baŋk | noun a financial establishment that uses money deposited by customers for investment, pays it out when required, makes loans at interest, and exchanges currency: [ as modifier ] : a bank account. a stock of something available for use when required: a blood bank | figurative : Britain has a bank of highly exportable skills. a site or receptacle where something may be deposited for recycling: a paper bank. (the bank ) the store of money or tokens held by the banker in some gambling or board games. the person holding the bank in some gambling or board games; the banker. verb [ with obj. ] deposit (money or valuables ) in a bank. [ no obj. ] have an account at a particular bank: the family has banked with Coutts for generations. informal win or earn (a sum of money ): he banked £100,000 for a hole-in-one. store (something, especially blood, tissue, or sperm ) for future use. PHRASES break the bank (in gambling ) win more money than is held by the bank. [ usu. with negative ] informal cost more than one can afford: at £30, the shirts won't break the bank. PHRASAL VERBS bank on rely on confidently: the prime minister cannot bank on their support. ORIGIN late 15th cent. (originally denoting a money dealer's table ): from French banque or Italian banca, from medieval Latin banca, bancus, of Germanic origin; related to bank 1 and bench .

 

bankable

bank |able |ˈbaŋkəb (ə )l | adjective (especially in the entertainment industry ) certain to bring profit and success: he needed some bankable names to star in the film. reliable: a bankable assurance. DERIVATIVES bankability |-əˈbɪlɪti |noun

 

bank account

bank account noun an arrangement made with a bank whereby one may deposit and withdraw money and in some cases be paid interest.

 

bankassurance

bank |assur ¦ance noun variant spelling of bancassurance.

 

bank balance

bank bal |ance noun the amount of money held in a bank account at a given moment.

 

bank barn

bank barn noun chiefly N. Amer. a barn built on a slope.

 

bank bill

bank bill noun 1 Brit. a bill of exchange drawn by one bank on another. 2 US another term for banknote.

 

bank book

bank book noun another term for passbook.

 

bank card

bank card noun a debit card or cash card.

 

bank discount

bank dis count noun interest computed on the face value of a loan and deducted in advance from the loan by the lending bank.

 

bank draft

bank draft noun a cheque drawn by a bank on its own funds.

 

banker

banker 1 |ˈbaŋkə | noun 1 a person who manages or owns a bank or group of banks. the person running the table, controlling play, or acting as dealer in some gambling or board games. 2 Brit. a supposedly certain bet: the horse should be a banker for him in the Members' race. a result forecast identically (while other forecasts differ ) in several football-pool entries on one coupon.

 

banker

banker 2 |ˈbaŋkə | noun 1 a boat employed in cod fishing off Newfoundland. a Newfoundland fisherman. 2 Austral. /NZ informal a river flooded to the top of its banks. 3 an additional locomotive used to assist a train in ascending an incline. 4 a bench at which a stonemason works.

 

banker's card

banker's card noun Brit. another term for cheque card.

 

banker's draft

banker's draft noun another term for bank draft.

 

banker's hours

banker's hours plural noun N. Amer. short working hours (in reference to the typical opening hours of a bank ).

 

banker's order

banker's order noun Brit. a standing order to a bank to make specified payments from one's account to a particular recipient.

 

Bank for International Settlements

Bank for International Settlements a bank founded in 1930 to promote the cooperation of central banks and to provide facilities for international financial operations. It is located at Basle in Switzerland.

 

Bankhead, Tallulah

Bank |head |ˈbaŋkhɛd | (1903 –68 ), American actress, noted for her uninhibited public persona. Her most successful film appearance was in Alfred Hitchcock's Lifeboat (1944 ).

 

bank holiday

bank holi |day noun Brit. a day on which banks are officially closed, kept as a public holiday.

 

banking

banking 1 |ˈbaŋkɪŋ | noun [ mass noun ] the business conducted or services offered by a bank: with this account, you are entitled to free banking.

 

banking

banking 2 |ˈbaŋkɪŋ | noun an embankment or artificial bank.

 

bank machine

bank ma |chine noun another term for cash dispenser.

 

bank manager

bank man |ager noun a person in charge of a local branch of a bank.

 

banknote

bank |note |ˈbaŋknəʊt | noun a piece of paper money, constituting a central bank's promissory note to pay a stated sum to the bearer on demand.

 

Bank of England

Bank of Eng |land the central bank of England and Wales, which issues legal tender, manages the national debt, administers exchange rate policy, and since 1997 sets interest rates. Founded in 1694, it was nationalized in 1946.

 

bank rate

bank rate noun another term for base rate or discount rate.

 

bankroll

bank |roll |ˈbaŋkrəʊl | noun N. Amer. a roll of banknotes. financial resources. verb [ with obj. ] informal support (a person, organization, or project ) financially: the project is bankrolled by wealthy expatriates.

 

bankrupt

bank |rupt |ˈbaŋkrʌpt | adjective 1 (of a person or organization ) declared in law as unable to pay their debts: his father went bankrupt and the family had to sell their home. impoverished or depleted: a bankrupt country with no natural resources. 2 completely lacking in a particular good quality: their cause is morally bankrupt. noun a person judged by a court to be insolvent, whose property is taken and disposed of for the benefit of their creditors. verb [ with obj. ] reduce (a person or organization ) to bankruptcy: the strike nearly bankrupted the union. ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from Italian banca rotta broken bench , from banca (see bank 2 ) and rompere to break . The change in the ending was due to association with Latin rupt- broken .

 

bankruptcy

bank |rupt ¦cy |ˈbaŋkrʌptsi | noun ( pl. bankruptcies ) [ mass noun ] 1 the state of being bankrupt: many companies were facing bankruptcy | [ count noun ] : a 7 \% increase in bankruptcies. 2 the state of being completely lacking in a particular good quality: the intellectual bankruptcy of the corporate media.

 

bankruptcy order

bank |rupt ¦cy order noun English Law an order of the court declaring a person bankrupt and placing their affairs under the control of a receiver or trustee. Compare with receiving order.

 

Banks, Ernie

Banks, Ernie |baNGks bæŋks | (1931 –), US baseball player; full name Ernest Banks; known as Mr. Cub. He played shortstop, then first base, for the Chicago Cubs from 1953 until 1971. Baseball Hall of Fame (1977 ).

 

Banks, Gordon

Banks |baŋks | (b.1937 ), English footballer. An outstanding goalkeeper, he played in the 1966 and 1970 World Cups. In 1972 a serious eye injury sustained in a car crash effectively ended his playing career.

 

Banks, Sir Joseph

Banks |baŋks | (1743 –1820 ), English botanist. He accompanied Captain James Cook on his first voyage to the Pacific, and helped to establish the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew.

 

banksia

banksia |ˈbaŋksɪə | noun an evergreen Australian shrub which typically has narrow leathery leaves and spikes of bottlebrush-like flowers. Genus Banksia, family Proteaceae. ORIGIN modern Latin, named after Sir Joseph Banks (see Banks, Sir Joseph ).

 

banksia rose

bank |sia rose noun a small-flowered climbing rose native to China. Rosa banksiae, family Rosaceae.

 

bank statement

bank state |ment noun a printed record of the balance in a bank account and the amounts that have been paid into it and withdrawn from it, issued periodically to the holder of the account.

 

bank swallow

bank swal |low noun N. Amer. see sand martin.

 

bank vole

bank vole noun a common reddish-brown Eurasian vole that lives in woodland and scrub. Clethrionomys glareolus, family Muridae.

 

American Oxford Thesaurus

bank

bank 1 noun 1 the bank of the great river: edge, side, shore, coast, embankment, bankside, levee, border, verge, boundary, margin, rim, fringe; literary marge, skirt. 2 a grassy bank: slope, rise, incline, gradient, ramp; mound, ridge, hillock, hummock, knoll; bar, reef, shoal, shelf; accumulation, pile, heap, mass, drift. 3 a bank of switches: array, row, line, tier, group, series. verb 1 they banked up the earth: pile (up ), heap (up ), stack (up ); accumulate, amass, assemble, put together. 2 the aircraft banked: tilt, lean, tip, slant, incline, angle, slope, list, camber, pitch, dip, cant. WORD LINKS riparian relating to a riverbank Word Links sections supply words that are related to the headword but do not normally appear in a thesaurus because they are not actual synonyms.

 

bank

bank 2 noun 1 money in the bank: financial institution, merchant bank, savings bank, finance company, trust company, credit union. 2 a blood bank: store, reserve, accumulation, stock, stockpile, supply, pool, fund, cache, hoard, deposit; storehouse, reservoir, repository, depository. verb I banked the money: deposit, pay in, invest, lay away. PHRASES bank on can the senator bank on your support? rely on, depend on, count on, place reliance on, bargain on, plan on; anticipate, expect; be confident of, be sure of, pin one's hopes /faith on, figure on.

 

bankroll

bankroll verb an extra $50 million will bankroll a national ad campaign: finance, pay for, fund, subsidize, invest in.

 

bankrupt

bankrupt adjective 1 the company was declared bankrupt: insolvent, failed, ruined, in debt, owing money, in the red, in arrears, in receivership; informal bust, belly up, broke, cash-strapped, flat broke. ANTONYMS solvent, in the black. 2 this government is bankrupt of ideas: bereft of, devoid of, empty of, destitute of; completely lacking in, without, in need of, wanting. ANTONYMS teeming with. verb the strike nearly bankrupted the union: ruin, impoverish, reduce to penury /destitution, bring to ruin, bring someone to their knees, wipe out, break; rare beggar, pauperize.

 

bankruptcy

bankruptcy noun many companies were facing bankruptcy: insolvency, liquidation, failure, ruin, financial ruin, collapse, receivership. ANTONYMS solvency.

 

Oxford Thesaurus

bank

bank 1 noun 1 the banks of Lake Michigan: edge, side, embankment, levee, border, verge, boundary, margin, rim, fringe, fringes, flank, brink, perimeter, circumference, extremity, periphery, limit, outer limit, limits, bound, bounds; literary marge, bourn, skirt. 2 a grassy bank: slope, rise, incline, gradient, ramp, acclivity; mound, ridge, hillock, hummock, knoll, hump, barrow, tumulus, earthwork, parados, berm; elevation, eminence, prominence; bar, reef, shoal, shelf; accumulation, pile, heap, mass, drift; Welsh & West Midlands tump. 3 a bank of switches: array, row, line, tier, group, series; panel, console, board. verb 1 they banked up the earth around their hollow | snows have banked up under the evergreens: pile (up ), heap (up ), stack (up ), make a pile of, make a heap of, make a stack of; accumulate, amass, assemble, put together. 2 she banked up the fire: damp (down ), smother, stifle. 3 she taught him how to bank the plane | the aircraft banked gently: tilt, lean, tip, slant, incline, angle, slope, list, camber, pitch, dip, cant, put /be at an angle. WORD LINKS bank riparian, riverine relating to a river bank Word Links sections supply words that are related to the headword but do not normally appear in a thesaurus because they are not actual synonyms.

 

bank

bank 2 noun 1 I paid the money into my bank: financial institution; commercial bank, merchant bank, savings bank, finance company, finance house, lender, mortgagee; Brit. high-street bank, clearing bank, building society; N. Amer. savings and loan (association ), thrift. 2 a blood bank: store, reserve, accumulation, stock, stockpile, inventory, supply, pool, fund, cache, hoard, deposit; storehouse, reservoir, repository, depository; rare amassment. verb 1 I banked the cheque: deposit, pay in; clear; save, save up, keep, keep in reserve, lay by, put aside, set aside, put by, put by for a rainy day, hoard, cache, garner; informal stash (away ), salt away, squirrel away. 2 the family has banked with Coutts for generations: have an account at, deposit one's money with, use, be a customer of, deal with, do business with. PHRASES bank on the prime minister cannot bank on their support: rely on, depend on, count on, place reliance on, bargain on, plan on, reckon on, calculate on, presume on; anticipate, expect, pin one's hopes on, hope for, take for granted, take as read, take on trust; be confident of, have (every ) confidence in, place (one's ) confidence in, be sure of, pin one's faith on, trust in; N. Amer. informal figure on.

 

banknote

banknote noun note; N. Amer. bill; N. Amer. informal greenback; N. Amer. & historical Treasury note; (banknotes ) paper money. ANTONYMS coin; plastic.

 

bankrupt

bankrupt adjective 1 the company was declared bankrupt: insolvent, bankrupted; failed, ruined, wiped out, gone under; in debt, owing money, in the red, in arrears; Brit. in administration, in receivership; informal bust, belly up, gone to the wall, on the rocks, broke, flat broke; informal, dated smashed; Brit. informal skint, stony broke, cleaned out, in Queer Street; Brit. informal, dated in Carey Street. ANTONYMS solvent. 2 this government is bankrupt of ideas: completely lacking in, without, bereft of, exhausted of, devoid of, empty of, depleted of, destitute of, vacant of, bare of, denuded of, deprived of; in need of, wanting; informal minus, sans. ANTONYMS teeming with. noun he was soon a bankrupt: insolvent, bankrupt person; debtor; pauper. verb the strike nearly bankrupted the union: ruin, make bankrupt, cause to go bankrupt, make insolvent, impoverish, reduce to penury /destitution, bring to ruin, bring someone to their knees, wipe out, break, cripple; rare pauperize, beggar.

 

bankruptcy

bankruptcy noun many companies were facing bankruptcy: insolvency, liquidation, failure, (financial ) ruin, ruination, debt, indebtedness; penury, beggary; Brit. administration, receivership; rare pauperdom. ANTONYMS solvency.

 

Duden Dictionary

Bank

Bank Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nk |die Bank; Genitiv: der Bank, Plural: die Banken italienisch banco, banca, eigentlich = Tisch des Geldwechslers, aus dem Germanischen 1 a Unternehmen, das Geld- und Kreditgeschäfte betreibt und den Zahlungsverkehr vermittelt ein Konto bei der Bank haben | Geld auf der Bank [liegen ] haben, von der Bank holen b Gebäude, in dem eine Bank 1a untergebracht ist die Bank ist 1910 gebaut worden 2 Glücksspiel Geldeinsatz eines einzelnen Bankhalters, der gegen alle anderen Spieler spielt oder den Einsatz verwaltet die Bank halten, sprengen | gegen die Bank spielen

 

Bank

Bank Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nk |die Bank; Genitiv: der Bank, Bänke mittelhochdeutsch, althochdeutsch banc = Bank, Tisch, ursprünglich = Erhöhung 1 a Sitzgelegenheit aus Holz, Stein o. Ä., die mehreren Personen nebeneinander Platz bietet sich auf eine Bank setzen | in der Schule in einer Bank (Schulbank ) sitzen | der Angeklagte saß unruhig in der Bank (Anklagebank )etwas auf die lange Bank schieben umgangssprachlich etwas Unangenehmes aufschieben, hinauszögern eigentlich = bis zur Bearbeitung in den langen Aktentruhen der Gerichte aufbewahren lassen er schob den Arztbesuch auf die lange Bank durch die Bank umgangssprachlich durchweg, ohne Ausnahme, ohne Unterschied eigentlich = in der Reihenfolge, wie die Leute auf einer Bank sitzen das Obst war durch die Bank frisch vor leeren Bänken vor wenigen Zuhörenden, Zuschauenden sie spielten vor leeren Bänken b Sport Auswechselbank 2 a Abkürzung: verschiedene Handwerkstische wie Drehbank, Hobelbank, Werkbank u. a. an der Bank arbeiten b bankförmiges Turngerät 3 a Kurzwort für: Sandbank b Anhäufung von Meereslebewesen, die eine Erhöhung über dem Meeresgrund hervorruft hohe Bänke von Austern, Korallen c lange Wolken- oder Dunstschicht d Geologie vom umliegenden Gestein gesonderte, fest zusammenhängende Gesteinsschicht 4 unverändert beibehaltene Vorhersage auf Tippscheinen eine Bank tippen | dieses Spiel ist eine Bank (kann man als Bank tippen ) | figurativ dieser Spieler ist eine Bank in unserem Team (umgangssprachlich ; man kann sich hundertprozentig auf ihn verlassen ); diese CD ist eine Bank (ein sicherer Erfolg ) als Geschenk 5 Sport Ausgangsstellung auf dem Boden mit auf Knie und Arme gestütztem Körper

 

Banka

Ban ka Bangka |B a nka |

 

Bankaktie

Bank ak tie Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkaktie |Aktie einer Bank 1a

 

Bankakzept

Bank ak zept Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkakzept |auf eine Bank gezogener und von dieser zur Gutschrift akzeptierter Wechsel

 

Bankangestellte

Bank an ge stell te substantiviertes Adjektiv, feminin |B a nkangestellte |vgl. Angestellte Angestellte in einer Bank 1a

 

Bankangestellter

Bank an ge stell ter substantiviertes Adjektiv, maskulin |B a nkangestellter |vgl. Angestellter Angestellter in einer Bank 1a

 

Bankanweisung

Bank an wei sung Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkanweisung |Geldanweisung auf eine Bank 1a

 

Bankauftrag

Bank auf trag Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkauftrag |Auftrag an eine Bank 1a , ein Geldgeschäft durchzuführen

 

Bankautomat

Bank au to mat Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkautomat |Automat, an dem bestimmte Bankgeschäfte (wie Geldabhebungen, Überweisungen u. Ä.) erledigt werden können

 

Bankazinn

Ban ka zinn Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkazinn |nach der Sundainsel Bangka Zinn, das aus besonders reinen Erzen Indonesiens gewonnen wird

 

Bankbeamter

Bank be am ter substantiviertes Adjektiv, maskulin vgl. Beamter

 

Bankbeamtin

Bank be am tin Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkbeamtin |weibliche Form zu Bankbeamter

 

Bankberater

Bank be ra ter Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkberater |Angestellter einer Bank 1a , der Kunden bei Bankgeschäften berät

 

Bankberaterin

Bank be ra te rin Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkberaterin |weibliche Form zu Bankberater

 

Bankbuch

Bank buch Substantiv, Neutrum Wirtschaft , das |B a nkbuch |dickes Heft, in dem die Guthaben und Umsätze der einzelnen Bankkonten erfasst werden

 

Bankbürgschaft

Bank bürg schaft Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkbürgschaft |Bürgschaft einer Bank 1a für bestimmte Geschäfte eines Kunden mit einem Dritten

 

Bankchef

Bank chef Substantiv, maskulin umgangssprachlich , der |B a nkchef |Chef einer Bank 1a

 

Bankchefin

Bank che fin Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkchefin |weibliche Form zu Bankchef

 

Bänkchen

Bänk chen Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B ä nkchen |Verkleinerungsform zu Bank 1

 

Bankdirektor

Bank di rek tor Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkdirektor |Direktor einer Bank 1a

 

Bankdirektorin

Bank di rek to rin Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkdirektorin |weibliche Form zu Bankdirektor

 

Bankeinzug

Bank ein zug Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkeinzug |das Einziehen 8a von Geldbeträgen durch eine Bank

 

Bankeisen

Bank ei sen Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkeisen |gelochtes Flacheisen an Tür - und Fensterrahmen

 

Bänkellied

Bän kel lied Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B ä nkellied |Moritat

 

Bänkelsang

Bän kel sang Substantiv, maskulin , der |B ä nkelsang |das Singen von Bänkelliedern [als Kunstform, Darbietungsform ]

 

Bänkelsänger

Bän kel sän ger Substantiv, maskulin , der |B ä nkelsänger |zu: Bänkel, mundartliche Verkleinerungsform von Bank 1a , da die wandernden Sänger von einer kleinen Bank herab ihre Geschichten und Lieder vortrugen (besonders vom 17. bis zum 19. Jahrhundert ) fahrender Sänger, der auf Jahrmärkten u. Ä. Moritaten vorträgt

 

Bänkelsängerin

Bän kel sän ge rin Substantiv, feminin , die |B ä nkelsängerin |weibliche Form zu Bänkelsänger

 

bänkelsängerisch

bän kel sän ge risch Adjektiv |b ä nkelsängerisch |die Art eines Bänkelsängers aufweisend

 

Bankenaufsicht

Ban ken auf sicht Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkenaufsicht |1 Überwachung der Banken 1a auf Einhaltung der gesetzlichen Vorschriften 2 Institution, der die Bankenaufsicht 1 obliegt

 

Bankenkonsortium

Ban ken kon sor ti um Substantiv, Neutrum Wirtschaft , das |B a nkenkonsortium |vorübergehender Zusammenschluss von Banken zur gemeinsamen Durchführung eines größeren Geschäfts

 

Bankenkrise

Ban ken kri se Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkenkrise |durch finanzielle Probleme verursachte Krise bei Banken 1a

 

Bankensektor

Ban ken sek tor Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkensektor |Bereich, der das gesamte Bankgewerbe umfasst Bankensektor soll schrumpfen

 

Bankenviertel

Ban ken vier tel Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkenviertel |Stadtviertel, in dem sich besonders viele Banken 1a befinden

 

Banker

Ban ker Substantiv, maskulin umgangssprachlich , der |B a nker auch ˈbɛŋkɐ |der Banker; Genitiv: des Bankers, Plural: die Banker unter Einfluss von englisch banker zu Bank 1a Bankier, Bankfachmann

 

Bankerl

Ban kerl Substantiv, Neutrum österreichisch umgangssprachlich , das |B a nkerl |das Bankerl; Genitiv: des Bankerls, Plural: die Bankerl [n ]; vgl. Pickerl mundartliche Verkleinerungsform von Bank 1 [kleine ] Bank 1 2 Sport Ersatzbank, Trainerbank

 

bankerott

ban ke rott selten bankrott |banker o tt |

 

Bankert

Ban kert Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkert |mittelhochdeutsch banchart, eigentlich = das auf der Schlafbank der Magd gezeugte Kind 1 landschaftlich veraltend, stark abwertend [nicht eheliches ] Kind oft als Schimpfwort 2 bayrisch, österreichisch abwertend ungezogenes Kind

 

Bankett

Ban kett Substantiv, Neutrum , das Bankette |Bank e tt |das Bankett; Genitiv: des Bankett [e ]s, Plural: die Bankette französisch banquette = Fußsteig, Verkleinerungsform von: banc = Bank etwas erhöhter [befestigter ] Randstreifen neben der Fahrbahn einer [Auto ]straße Bankett nicht befahrbar!

 

Bankett

Ban kett Substantiv, Neutrum gehoben , das |Bank e tt |das Bankett; Genitiv: des Bankett [e ]s, Plural: die Bankette, selten Banketts italienisch banchetto, ursprünglich = Beistelltisch, Verkleinerungsform von: banco, Bank Festessen, Festmahl [für jemanden ] ein Bankett geben

 

Bankette

Ban ket te Substantiv, feminin , die Bankett |Bank e tte |die Bankette; Genitiv: der Bankette, Plural: die Banketten französisch banquette = Fußsteig, Verkleinerungsform von: banc = Bank etwas erhöhter [befestigter ] Randstreifen neben der Fahrbahn einer [Auto ]straße

 

Bankfach

Bank fach Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkfach |1 ohne Plural Spezialgebiet der Bankkaufleute 2 Schließfach in einer Bank 1

 

Bankfachfrau

Bank fach frau Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkfachfrau |Expertin auf dem Gebiet des Bankwesens

 

Bankfachmann

Bank fach mann Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkfachmann |Experte auf dem Gebiet des Bankwesens

 

bankfähig

bank hig Adjektiv |b a nkfähig |

 

Bankfeiertag

Bank fei er tag Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkfeiertag |

 

Bankfiliale

Bank fi li a le Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkfiliale | Filiale 2 einer Bank 1a

 

Bankgeheimnis

Bank ge heim nis Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkgeheimnis |Recht und Pflicht einer Bank 1a , Verhältnisse und Konten ihrer Kundschaft geheim zu halten

 

Bankgeschäft

Bank ge schäft Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkgeschäft |Geschäft, das an Banken 1a abgeschlossen wird

 

Bankgewerbe

Bank ge wer be Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkgewerbe |Gesamtheit der gewerblichen Unternehmen, die Geld- und Kreditgeschäfte betreiben

 

Bankguthaben

Bank gut ha ben Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkguthaben | Guthaben a , das jemand bei einer Bank 1a hat

 

Bankhalter

Bank hal ter Substantiv, maskulin Glücksspiel , der |B a nkhalter |Person, die das Spiel leitet, die Einsätze verwaltet und gegen den die übrigen Spieler spielen

 

Bankhalterin

Bank hal te rin Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkhalterin |weibliche Form zu Bankhalter

 

Bankhaus

Bank haus Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkhaus | Bank 1

 

Bankier

Ban ki er Substantiv, maskulin , der |baŋˈki̯eː |der Bankier; Genitiv: des Bankiers, Plural: die Bankiers französisch banquier, zu: banque = Bank Inhaber, Mitglied des Vorstandes einer Bank

 

Bankierin

Ban ki e rin Substantiv, feminin , die |Banki e rin |

 

Banking

Ban king Substantiv, Neutrum , das |ˈbæŋkɪŋ |das Banking; Genitiv: des Banking [s ] englisch banking, zu: to bank = ein Konto haben (bei ), zu: bank < französisch banque, italienisch banco, Bank Bankwesen, Bankverkehr, Bankgeschäfte

 

Bankingtheorie

Ban king the o rie Substantiv, feminin , die die Bankingtheorie; Genitiv: der Bankingtheorie Geldtheorie, nach der die Ausgabe von Banknoten nicht an die volle Edelmetalldeckung gebunden zu sein braucht

 

Bankinstitut

Bank in s ti tut , Bank in sti tut Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkinstitut | Bank 1b

 

bankintern

bank in tern Adjektiv |b a nkintern |innerhalb einer Bank 1a vorkommend, sich abspielend bankinterne Vorschriften, Regelungen | die Anleihe wurde bankintern als riskant eingestuft

 

Bankkauffrau

Bank kauf frau Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkkauffrau |Bankangestellte mit abgeschlossener Banklehre oder gleichartiger Ausbildung Berufsbezeichnung

 

Bankkaufmann

Bank kauf mann Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkkaufmann |Bankangestellter mit abgeschlossener Banklehre oder gleichartiger Ausbildung Berufsbezeichnung

 

Bankkonto

Bank kon to Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkkonto |Konto bei einer Bank 1a

 

Bankkredit

Bank kre dit Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkkredit |von einer Bank 1a gewährter Kredit

 

Bankkunde

Bank kun de Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkkunde |Kunde einer bestimmten Bank 1 1 a

 

Bankkundin

Bank kun din Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkkundin |weibliche Form zu Bankkunde

 

Banklehre

Bank leh re Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nklehre |ohne Plural Lehre bei einer Bank 1a

 

Bankleitzahl

Bank leit zahl Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkleitzahl |achtstellige Zahl zur numerischen Kennzeichnung von Banken 1a und Sparkassen Abkürzung: BLZ

 

Bänkler

Bänk ler Substantiv, maskulin schweizerisch , der |B ä nkler |Banker

 

Bänklerin

Bänk le rin Substantiv, feminin , die |B ä nklerin |weibliche Form zu Bänkler

 

Bankmanager

Bank ma na ger Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkmanager |Manager einer Bank 1a

 

Bankmanagerin

Bank ma na ge rin Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkmanagerin |weibliche Form zu Bankmanager

 

Banknachbar

Bank nach bar Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nknachbar |Schüler, der neben einem anderen Schüler, neben einer anderen Schülerin in der Schulbank sitzt

 

Banknachbarin

Bank nach ba rin Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nknachbarin |weibliche Form zu Banknachbar

 

Banknote

Bank no te Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nknote |Geldschein Kurzform: Note 3

 

Bankomat

Ban ko mat Substantiv, maskulin besonders österreichisch , der ® |Bankom a t |der Bankomat; Genitiv: des Bankomaten, Plural: die Bankomaten aus Bank und Aut omat Bankautomat

 

Bankomatkarte

Ban ko mat kar te Substantiv, feminin , die |Bankom a tkarte |

 

Bankraub

Bank raub Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkraub |das Ausrauben einer Bank 1a

 

Bankräuber

Bank räu ber Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkräuber |jemand, der einen Bankraub begeht, begangen hat

 

Bankräuberin

Bank räu be rin Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkräuberin |weibliche Form zu Bankräuber

 

Bankreihe

Bank rei he Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkreihe |Reihe von Bänken 1 die vorderen, hinteren Bankreihen

 

bankrott

ban k rott , bank rott Adjektiv |bankr o tt |nicht mehr in der Lage, seinen finanziellen Verpflichtungen nachzukommen; finanziell ruiniert der Betrieb ist bankrott | sich [für ] bankrott erklären | diese Maßnahmen machen die Wirtschaft bankrott | umgangssprachlich scherzhaft du machst mich noch bankrott arm | figurativ wir mussten uns in dieser Frage bankrott erklären (mussten zugeben, dass wir nicht weiterwussten )

 

Bankrott

Ban k rott , Bank rott Substantiv, maskulin , der |Bankr o tt |der Bankrott; Genitiv: des Bankrott [e ]s, Plural: die Bankrotte italienisch banco rotto, eigentlich = zerbrochener Tisch (des Geldwechslers ), aus: banco (Bank ) und rotto = zerbrochen Unfähigkeit, Zahlungen zu leisten; finanzieller Ruin den Bankrott erklären, anmelden, [kurz ] vor dem Bankrott stehen | figurativ politischer, geistiger Bankrott Bankrott machen zahlungsunfähig werden ; scheitern er hat mit seiner Politik Bankrott gemacht

 

Bankrotterklärung

Ban k rott er klä rung , Bank rott er klä rung Substantiv, feminin , die |Bankr o tterklärung |öffentliche Erklärung des Bankrotts figurativ ihre Ausführungen kommen einer Bankrotterklärung gleich

 

Bankrotteur

Ban k rot teur, Bank rot teur Substantiv, maskulin , der |baŋkrɔˈtøːɐ̯ |der Bankrotteur; Genitiv: des Bankrotteurs, Plural: die Bankrotteure mit französierender Endung für älteres Bankrottierer jemand, der bankrott ist

 

Bankrotteurin

Ban k rot teu rin , Bank rot teu rin Substantiv, feminin , die |baŋkrɔˈtøːrɪn |weibliche Form zu Bankrotteur

 

bankrottgehen

bank rott ge hen starkes Verb umgangssprachlich |bankr o ttgehen |starkes Verb; Perfektbildung mit »ist « zahlungsunfähig werden

 

bankrottieren

ban k rot tie ren , bank rot tie ren schwaches Verb |bankrott ie ren |bankrottgehen

 

Bankschalter

Bank schal ter Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkschalter | Schalter 2 , an dem Kundinnen und Kunden einer Bank 1a ihre Geschäfte erledigen

 

Bankstelle

Bank stel le Substantiv, feminin österreichisch , die |B a nkstelle |Filiale einer Bank

 

Banküberfall

Bank über fall Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nküberfall |Überfall auf eine Bank 1a

 

Bankverbindung

Bank ver bin dung Substantiv, feminin , die |B a nkverbindung |kontoführendes Geldinstitut bitte teilen Sie uns ihre Bankverbindung (den Namen Ihres Geldinstituts und Ihre Kontonummer ) mit

 

Bankverkehr

Bank ver kehr Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkverkehr |geschäftlicher Verkehr mit Banken 1a

 

Bankvorstand

Bank vor stand Substantiv, maskulin , der |B a nkvorstand |Vorstand einer Bank 1a

 

Bankwesen

Bank we sen Substantiv, Neutrum , das |B a nkwesen |ohne Plural alles, was mit Banken 1a und den von ihnen getätigten Geschäften zusammenhängt

 

Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary

bank

bank 1 /bæŋk /〖原義は 「盛り上がったところ 」〗名詞 s /-s /1 C (川 運河などの )土手 , ; (), ほとり the left [right ] bank of the river 川の左 [右 ]岸 (!左右は下流に向かっていう ) ▸ a grand old house on the bank of the Thames テムズ川のほとりにたたずむ古い邸宅 2 C (境界などの )盛り土 (mound ); (堤状になった土 霧などの )かたまり (mass )▸ a low bank of cloud (s ) ≒ a low cloud bank 低く横たわる層雲 3 C バンク 〘車などが高速で曲がれるようにカーブに設けられた路面の傾斜 〙.4 〘空 〙U バンク 〘飛行機が旋回時に機体を傾けること 〙; C その傾斜 .5 sandbank .6 C ⦅米 ⦆(ビリヤード台の )クッション .動詞 他動詞 1 ⦅英 ⦆…を積み上げる ,たい 積させる ; …を積み上げて «…に » する (up ) «into » .2 ⦅英 ⦆ «…で » …に 土手 []を築く , …を 囲む «with » .3 〈雲 霧など 〉を積み重ねる (up ).4 〈火 〉に 薪 まき [炭など ]をくべる (up ).5 飛行機 バイク 車 〉 (旋回時に )片側に傾ける, バンクさせる .6 〈道路など 〉の路面を傾斜させる .7 ⦅米 ⦆ビリヤード 〈球 〉をクッションに当てる .自動詞 1 飛行機 バイク 車が 〉 (旋回時に )片側に傾く, バンクする .2 〈雪 雲などが 〉積み重なる (up ).b nk A p [p A ]1 他動詞 1 , 3 , 4 .2 A 〈川などの流れ 〉をせき止める .

 

bank

bank 2 /bæŋk /〖<フランス;ベンチ 」>「 (両替商の )勘定台 」〗(名 )banker, banking 名詞 s /-s /C 1 銀行 ;⦅英 ⦆the B- 〗イングランド銀行 (Bank of England )the Bank of Japan 日本銀行 have [put ] money in a bank 銀行に預金がある [をする ]go to the bank to deposit [withdraw ] money お金を預け [引き出し ]に銀行へ行く 2 〖通例複合語で 〗貯蔵庫, …銀行 [バンク ]an eye [a data ] bank アイ [データ ]バンク 3 (賭博 とばく の )胴元 ,場銭 (ばせん )break [⦅米話 ⦆burst ] the bank 胴元の金を巻き上げる 4 貯金箱 ▸ a piggy bank ブタの貯金箱 be m king b nk ⦅米俗 ⦆がっぽり稼いでいる .br ak the b nk 1 3 .2 ⦅くだけて おどけて ⦆〖通例否定文で 〗(物が )高くて買えない, (人を )無一文にする .l ugh [cr ] all the w y to the b nk もうかって笑いが止まらない .動詞 自動詞 1 〈人が 〉 «…に » 預金する ;【銀行と 】取り引きする «with , at » .2 銀行を経営する .3 (ばくちの )胴元になる .他動詞 〈金など 〉 (銀行に )預ける .b nk on A A 〈人 事など 〉を当てにする, …に頼る ;A 〈人 〉が «…するのを » 当てにする «do ing, to do » .~́ acc unt 銀行預金口座 [残高 ]open a bank account 口座を開く deposit money in [withdraw money from ] the bank account 預金する [預金を引き出す ]~́ b lance 銀行預金残高 .~́ b ll 1 ⦅主に米 ⦆banknote .2 ⦅英 ⦆銀行為替 かわせ , 手形 .~́ c rd ⦅米 ⦆銀行発行のクレジットカード ; ⦅英 ⦆cheque card .~́ cl rk 銀行員 .~́ cr sis 銀行恐慌 .~́ dr ft 銀行為替手形 (⦅略 ⦆B /D ).~̀ h liday ⦅英 ⦆〖しばしばB - H- 〗(土日以外の )法定休日, 祝日 (⦅米 ⦆legal holiday )(holiday ); 銀行休業日 .~́ l an 銀行ローン .~́ m nager 銀行支店長 .~́ n te banknote .~́ r te 公定歩合 .~́ st tement (銀行が出す )取引明細書 .

 

bank

bank 3 名詞 C 1 (同種の物の )列, 並び ▸ a bank of TV cameras ずらりと並んだテレビカメラ 2 (ピアノ タイプライターのキーなどの )ひと並び, 1列 .3 (ガレー船の )こぎ手席 ; オールの列 .

 

bankable

b nk a ble 形容詞 1 ⦅くだけて ⦆俳優 興行などが 〉確実にもうかる, ドル箱の .2 (ローンなどが )銀行で受け付けられる .

 

bankbook

b nk b ok 名詞 C 銀行預金通帳 (passbook ).

 

banked

banked /-t /形容詞 1 通例 名詞 の前で 〗傾斜 [バンク ]の設けられた [ついた ]〈道など 〉.2 be «…を » 積み上げられた «with » ; 〈物が 〉堆 たい 積した (up ).

 

banker

bank er /bǽŋkə r /bank 2 名詞 s /-z /C 1 銀行の重役 [経営者 ], 銀行家 (bank clerk ).2 (ゲーム 賭博 とばく などでの )親, 胴元 ; バンカー 〘トランプの賭 (か )けゲームの1つ 〙.3 ⦅英 ⦆(サッカーくじでの )勝敗予想の的中率 .~́ 's c rd ⦅英 ⦆cheque bank card .~́ 's dr ft bank draft .~́ 's rder ⦅英 ⦆銀行為替 .

 

banking

bank ing /bǽŋkɪŋ /bank 2 名詞 U 銀行業 ; 銀行の取引業務 Internet [on-line ] banking インターネットバンキング 〘窓口に行かずインターネットを介して行われる銀行取引 〙

 

banknote

b nk n te 名詞 C ⦅主に英 ⦆紙幣, 銀行券 .

 

bankroll

b nk r ll 動詞 他動詞 ⦅主に英 くだけて ⦆〈事業など 〉に資金 [財政 ]援助をする (finance ).名詞 C ⦅主に米 くだけて ⦆資金, 札束 .er 名詞 C 資金援助者 .

 

bankrupt

bank rupt /bǽŋkrʌpt, -rəpt /bank (銀行 )rupt (破れた )〗形容詞 比較なし 1 〈人 会社などが 〉破産した , 支払い不能の go [become ] bankrupt 破産 [破綻 たん ]する The company was declared bankrupt , owing 5 billion yen .その会社は50億円の負債を抱えて破産宣告を受けた 2 かたく 非難して ⦆〈人が 〉【持つべき良い資質を 】欠いて «of , in » morally bankrupt モラルに欠けて 動詞 他動詞 〈人 事業など 〉を破産させる .名詞 C 1 〘法 〙破産者 .2 (人格的 )破綻者 .

 

bankruptcy

bank rupt cy /bǽŋkrʌp (t )si, -rəp (t )-/bankrupt 名詞 -cies /-z /1 U C 破産 , 倒産 declare [file for ] bankruptcy 破産宣言 [申請 ]をする go into bankruptcy 破産する 2 U 〖修飾語句と共に 〗(良い資質を )欠いている状態; (計画 名誉の )破綻 たん .