101 examples of monied in sentences

They had formed such a connection with the monied interest of the kingdom, that no administration could go on without them.

Adj. wealthy, rich, affluent, opulent, moneyed, monied, worth much; well to do, well off; warm; comfortable, well, well provided for. made of money; rich as Croesus, filthy rich, rich as a Jew^; rolling in riches, rolling in wealth.

A PRISONER Is one that hath been a monied man, and is still a very close fellow; whosoever is of his acquaintance, let them make much of him, for they shall find him as fast a friend as any in England: he is a sure man, and you know where to find him.

Lett me hugg thee For this, deare frend; heareafter I will style thee My better genius; thou hast monied mee in this, Nay landed me, made me thy braynes executor, And putt mee in a lardge possession.

It is said he is to that country what Huntington and other monied men are to this country.

Not a farthing could we get of him; and in short, as far as the monied interest of the colony was concerned, his mission proved an entire failure.

His daughter had been at school with Claire and the Baroness de Préfont, and a bitter warfare was waged incessantly between the juvenile aristocrats and the monied damsels without handles to their names.

None but the monied aristocracy among them, would be likely to decline such offers.

None but the monied aristocracy would be likely to decline such offers.

None but the monied aristocracy would be likely to decline such offers.

Barbados we notice the same forwardness in founding monied institutions.

I am endeavoring to sound the alarm to my fellow-citizens that this power, tremendous as it is, is endeavoring to unite itself with the monied power of the country, in order to extend its dominion and perpetuate its existence.

None but the monied aristocracy among them, would be likely to decline such offers.

None but the monied aristocracy would be likely to decline such offers.

None but the monied aristocracy would be likely to decline such offers.

Barbados we notice the same forwardness in founding monied institutions.

I am endeavoring to sound the alarm to my fellow-citizens that this power, tremendous as it is, is endeavoring to unite itself with the monied power of the country, in order to extend its dominion and perpetuate its existence.

In the month of March, 1805, the monied interest in this town opened an institution under the above title; there being three hundred subscribers, at £1000.

"With these measures fell in all monied men."SWIFT: Johnson's Dict.

The wells were discovered by Lord North in 1606, while he was staying at Eridge, and in a few years Tunbridge Wells became the resort of the monied and leisured classes of London and other parts of the kingdom.

There is, in short, a productive class, and there is, besides, a class technically styled the monied class, who live upon the interest of their capital, without engaging personally in the work of production.

A certain portion of the monied class would be obliged either to sacrifice their predilections by engaging in business, or to lend on inferior security; and they would accordingly accept, where they could obtain good security, an abatement of interest equivalent to the difference of risk.

These times strike monied worldlings with dismay: Even rich men, brave by nature, taint the air With words of apprehension and despair: While tens of thousands, thinking on the affray, Men unto whom sufficient for the day 5 And minds not stinted or unfilled are given, Sound, healthy, children of the God of heaven, Are cheerful as the rising sun in May.

Certainly, if, as I hear the monied men of Boston have gone largely into this speculation, their habitual sagacity must have been seriously at fault; for here on the spot nobody mentions the project but as a subject of utter derision.

The great capitalists and monied men of the country are Northern men; the planters are men of large estates but restricted meansmany of them are deeply involved in debt, and there are very few who do not depend from year to year for their subsistence on the harvest of their fields and the chances of the cotton and rice crops of each season.

101 examples of  monied  in sentences