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impecunious
[ im-pi-kyoo-nee-uhs ]
impecunious
/ ˌɪmpɪˈkjuːnɪəs; ˌɪmpɪkjuːnɪˈɒsɪtɪ /
adjective
- without money; penniless
Derived Forms
- ˌimpeˈcuniously, adverb
- ˌimpeˈcuniousness, noun
Other Words From
- impe·cuni·ous·ly adverb
- impe·cuni·ous·ness im·pe·cu·ni·os·i·ty [im-pi-kyoo-nee-, os, -i-tee], noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of impecunious1
Word History and Origins
Origin of impecunious1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Fans and players relatively unscathed, the pyramid structure affirmed, the current season’s integrity retained, clubs in trouble helped and the 14’s own playing staff not raided by clubs so impecunious they need their own goldmine.”
The Manhattan Institute’s Brian Riedl reports that the overall personal-savings rate soared from 8 percent to 32 percent: People are avoiding air travel and restaurants not because they are impecunious but because they are prudent.
As a young, eager-to-please novelist, he had transformed his impecunious father into the whimsical and charming Mr. Micawber of “Copperfield”; after his father’s death came a more selfish and unforgiving version in “Little Dorrit.”
He wrote in a Nobel biography that he grew up in an environment of “secure but impecunious Midwestern academics.”
“On both sides my family were secure but impecunious Midwestern academics,” Dr. Anderson wrote in his Nobel biography.
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