VOCABULARY for IELTS – Part 60

VOCABULARY for IELTS
VOCABULARY for IELTS

VOCABULARY for IELTS

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Cash – money in the form of notes and coins, rather than cheques or credit cards.

Sentence – John always pays cash down for anything he buys.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Competition – a situation in which someone is trying to win something or be more successful than someone else.

Sentence – You can’t realistically expect to win the whole competition.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Consumer – a person who buys goods or services for their own use.

Sentence – For a monthly flat fee, paid by the consumer or employer, HMOs provide a specified list of medical services both in and outside the hospital.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Consumer goods – products that people buy for their own use.

Sentence – In these four ways, housing differs from other consumer goods though it remains fundamentally a private market commodity.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Cost – the amount of money needed to buy, do, or make something.

Sentence – This hard-wearing material combines cost effectiveness with quality.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Crash – If a vehicle crashes or someone crashes it, it is involved in an accident, usually a serious one in which the vehicle is damaged and someone is hurt.

Sentence – The impact of the crash reduced the car to a third of its original length.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Credit – a method of paying for goods or services at a later time, usually paying interest as well as the original money.

Sentence – The fundamental defect of fathers is that they want their children to be a credit to them.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Currency – the money that is used in a particular country at a particular time.

Sentence – Investors and currency dealers were caught completely unawares by the Bundesbank’s action.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Debt- something, especially money, that is owed to someone else, or the state of owing something.

Sentence – They’ve borrowed so much money that they’re up to their ears in debt.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Deficit – the total amount by which money spent is more than money received.

Sentence – Failing to tackle the deficit would be throwing away an opportunity we haven’t had for a generation.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Deposit – to leave something somewhere.

Sentence – A man on his way to deposit $120 000 in a bank was waylaid by two men who punched him and snatched his bag yesterday.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Depression – the state of feeling very unhappy and without hope for the future.

Sentence – One day depression descended upon him, and wherever he went after that he could never throw it off.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Economics – the way in which trade, industry, or money is organized, or the study of this.

Sentence – Where economics comes unstuck is when it doesn’t take account of the anticipated actions of human beings.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Economy – the system of trade and industry by which the wealth of a country is made and used.

Sentence – Their economy was the Cinderella of the industrialized world.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Finance – (the management of) a supply of money.

Sentence – Finance for a sole trader usually comes from the individual’s own savings or from family and friends.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Fiscal – connected with (public) money.

Sentence – Fiscal Welfare: the tax system which adjusts the level of income on which tax is payable through reliefs and allowances.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Global – relating to the whole world.

Sentence – Television has helped to create a global village.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Inflation – a continuing rise in prices caused by an increase in the money supply and demand for goods.

Sentence – Inflation is considered to be undesirable because of its adverse effects on income distribution.

VOCABULARY for IELTS - Part 60

Interest – money that is charged by a bank or other financial organization for borrowing money.

Sentence – The bank strongly resisted cutting interest rates.

SEE MORE POSTS>>

[quads id=4]
[quads id=5]
[quads id=7]
[quads id=8]
20th February, IELTS Daily Task
https://www.instamojo.com/CZMOGA
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Best Hot Selling Books | Get Discount upto 20%

X
error: Content is protected !!
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x