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Impecunious   Listen
Impecunious

adjective
1.
Not having enough money to pay for necessities.  Synonyms: hard up, in straitened circumstances, penniless, penurious, pinched.



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"Impecunious" Quotes from Famous Books



... as a very long-headed proceeding," I remarked, with the impartial wisdom of the impecunious, ...
— The Red Thumb Mark • R. Austin Freeman

... with diamonds and self-satisfaction. But he was unmistakably one of our people. It was like coming across a human being in the jungle. Moreover, his very diamonds somehow told a tale of former want, of a time when he had landed, an impecunious immigrant like myself; and this made him a living ...
— The Rise of David Levinsky • Abraham Cahan

... as she remembered Sir Lyon Dilsford. He was an intelligent, impecunious, pleasant kind of man, still, like his host, on the sunny side of forty. Sir Lyon was "in the City," as are now so many men of his class and kind. He took his work seriously, and spent many hours of each day east of Temple Bar. By way of relaxation he helped ...
— From Out the Vasty Deep • Mrs. Belloc Lowndes

... In the Labour movement Mr. MacDonald won success over older men by an indefatigable industry, a marked aptitude for politics, and by an obvious prosperity. Other things being equal, it is inevitable that in politics, as in commerce, the needy, impecunious man will be rejected in favour of the man with an assured balance at the bank, and the man of regular habits preferred before a gifted but uncertain genius. The Socialist and Labour movements of our time have claimed the services of many gifted ...
— The Rise of the Democracy • Joseph Clayton

... he called, and resumed his seat as a lady entered—a stranger to him. At first glance he guessed she might be the wife of some impecunious musician, come to plead for restitution of an instrument. Such things happened now and again on Monday mornings; nor was the mistake without excuse in Miss Sally's attire. When travelling without her ...
— True Tilda • Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch


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