How To Use Ready money In A Sentence

  • Kit Rackrent, has lived beyond his income, and finds himself distressed for ready money, tenants obligingly offer to take his land at a rent far below the value, and to pay him a small sum of money in hand, which they call fining down the yearly rent. Tales and Novels — Volume 04
  • 'They're as proud as a turkey when they hold the ready cash, You ought to' ear the way they laugh an 'joke; They are tricky an' they're funny when they've got the ready money, -- Ow! but see 'em when they're all stone-broke. ' The Light That Failed
  • ” In other words, having taken the king's ready money, he was thenceforth, during the king's pleasure, “ready” for the king's service. Languagehat.com: PRESS.
  • By the way, he inquired whether you played 'piquet' or 'bezique,' from which I infer that he is looking for an antagonist with ready money. The King's Men A Tale of To-morrow
  • When an Irish gentleman, like Sir Kit Rackrent, has lived beyond his income, and finds himself distressed for ready money, tenants obligingly offer to take his land at a rent far below the value, and to pay him a small sum of money in hand, which they call fining down the yearly rent. Castle Rackrent
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  • I, haue receuied 6. tumens in ready money, 200. shaughs is a tumen, reckoning euery shaugh for sixe pence Russe. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
  • Gold crowns and dentures could then be traded for ready money when one of those whopping utility bills lands on your doormat. Times, Sunday Times
  • In addition, he has ready money for policemen that make impromptu inspection along the way.
  • Once in a while he would try to crowd into the Conversation just to let them know that old Ready Money was still present, but every time he came up Dearie would do her blamedest to Bean him and put him out of the Game. Ade's Fables
  • He declared himself feudatory lieutenant of the pope, paid about eight thousand pounds sterling in ready money to the legate A Philosophical Dictionary
  • It is painful to relate, that this powerful writer, and good man, who narrowly escaped the guillotine, expired in a garret, in extreme poverty, at the age of eighty-four; the only property he left being one assignat of fifty livres, worth not threepence in ready money. On the Portraits of English Authors on Gardening, with Biographical Notices of Them, 2nd edition, with considerable additions
  • Ready money is a ready medicine. 
  • Gold crowns and dentures could then be traded for ready money when one of those whopping utility bills lands on your doormat. Times, Sunday Times
  • The former of these I do report deficient; which seemeth to me to be such a deficience as if, in the making of an inventory touching the state of a defunct, it should be set down that there is no ready money. The Advancement of Learning
  • I, haue receuied 6. tumens in ready money, 200. shaughs is a tumen, reckoning euery shaugh for sixe pence The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation — Volume 03
  • People living a hand-to-mouth existence are turning to ' buy-back stores' to get their hands on ready money.
  • Ready money is a ready medicine. 
  • -- When an Irish gentleman, like Sir Kit Rackrent, has lived beyond his income, and finds himself distressed for ready money, tenants obligingly offer to take his land at a rent far below the value, and to pay him a small sum of money in hand, which they call fining down the yearly rent. Castle Rackrent
  • he seems to have ample ready money
  • Fortunately – for we were nine months in arrear of pay – money was so scarce that a trifle of ready money produced a great deal. The Autobiography of Liuetenant-General Sir Harry Smith, Baronet of Aliwal on the Sutlej, G. C. B.
  • His business was embarrassed for a time by lack of ready money.
  • Ready money is a ready medicine. 
  • Company upon trust, and sold at a great discount for ready money. [v] A scheme was proposed for coining two or three hundred thousand pounds of base money: [v*] such were the extremities to which Charles was reduced. The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.I., Part E. From Charles I. to Cromwell
  • The bride was given a dowry of three thousand livres in ready money, a third of it reserved for the couple's communal use.
  • The fathers of the Church (I mean the ancient ones), and also the canons of the Church, forbade selling on trust at a higher price than for ready money, which was in effect to forbid _trust_; and this, doubtless, was one of the great objects which those wise and pious men had in view; for they were fathers in legislation and morals as well as in religion. Advice to Young Men And (Incidentally) to Young Women in the Middle and Higher Ranks of Life. In a Series of Letters, Addressed to a Youth, a Bachelor, a Lover, a Husband, a Father, a Citizen, or a Subject.
  • Mrs. Ludgate was decided by the word patronize: she took the hat, and desired that it should be set down in her bill: but Mrs. la Mode was extremely concerned that she had made a rule, nay a vow, not to take any thing but ready money for the spring hats; and she could not break her vow, even for her favourite Mrs. Ludgate. Tales and Novels — Volume 02
  • I have no ready money; but take this from me in requital of thy kindness and good offices. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • The fathers of the English _church_, forbade selling on trust at a higher price than for ready money, which was the same thing in effect as to _forbid trust_; and this was doubtless one of the great objects those wise and pious men had in view; for they were fathers in legislation and morals, as well as in religion. The Young Man's Guide
  • The hooter buys snacks at ordinary times, buy pollen, or money paying a car, can plant with this " cost certificate " , can hold after collection of butcher, wagoner convert ready money to bagnio .
  • Gold crowns and dentures could then be traded for ready money when one of those whopping utility bills lands on your doormat. Times, Sunday Times

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