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You say: "dinheiro"
Yes, you can loose money on treasury notes if you buy and sell them. If you buy them with a yield, say, of 3% and the yield rises, the value (price) will fall. However, if you buy and hold until maturity, you will not loose money, but you might loose opportunities to invest your money at a greater return elsewhere.
The Hawaiian translation for money is kālā.
money is anything which is accepted as a medium of exchange. E. g. Hard cash say Rs 100 note. Near money is not money but very near to money say Bill of exchange, Deposit certificate.
Dinheiro
Another way to say 'raise money' is to 'collect funds' or 'secure financing'.
I am not a banking expert, but my understanding is that - say you have 100$ in your account and you pay in a cheque for another 100$, then your current balance will be 200$ but your available balance will be 100$ until the cheque clears (when the available balance will match the current balance). This protects the bank from someone paying in a cheque that may 'bounce' and withdrawing money that never gets put into the account.
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Well you could say that it does because the "paper" money is made out of cotton from a bush. So money grows on a BUSH!
Kosi Owo is yoruba for there's no money or money is not available.
In my opinion another way to say 'money saver' would be: a good deal, a bargain, economically smart or even 'budget friendly'.
Reviews are available on Amazon. Some say "Don't waste your money" but some say the stroller is durable. More reviews can be found on Walmart, Junglee and Buzzilions.
wait until they get the money then say you've begged for 7 months
The source of money is not dehydrated, being rich, having enough to support us..
They say they are but it wont be out until late 2012.
Good Bye Until we meet again
I don't have money to growing up another live.