bill 1 (b l)n.1. An itemized list or statement of fees or charges. 2. A statement or list of particulars, such as a theater program or menu. 3. The entertainment offered by a theater. 4. A public notice, such as an advertising poster. 5. a. A piece of legal paper money: a ten-dollar bill. b. Slang One hundred dollars. 6. a. A bill of exchange. b. Obsolete A promissory note. 7. a. A draft of a proposed law presented for approval to a legislative body. b. The law enacted from such a draft: a bottle bill in effect in three states; the GI Bill. 8. Law A document presented to a court and containing a formal statement of a case, complaint, or petition. tr.v. billed, bill·ing, bills 1. To present a statement of costs or charges to. 2. To enter on a statement of costs or on a particularized list. 3. a. To advertise or schedule by public notice or as part of a program. b. To declare or describe officially; proclaim: a policy that was billed as an important departure for the administration.
[Middle English bille, from Norman French, from Medieval Latin billa, alteration of bulla, seal on a document, from Latin, bubble.]
bill a·ble adj. |
bill 2 (b l)n.1. The horny part of the jaws of a bird; a beak. 2. A beaklike mouth part, such as that of a turtle. 3. The visor of a cap. 4. Nautical The tip of the fluke of an anchor. intr.v. billed, bill·ing, bills To touch beaks together. Idiom: bill and coo To kiss or caress and murmur endearments.
[Middle English, from Old English bile.] |
bill 3 (b l)n.1. A billhook. 2. A halberd or similar weapon with a hooked blade and a long handle.
[Middle English bil, from Old English bill.] |
bill 1 Noun 1. a statement of money owed for goods or services supplied 2. a draft of a proposed new law presented to a law-making body 3. a printed notice or advertisement 4. US & Canad a piece of paper money; note 5. any list of items, events, etc. such as a theatre programme Verb 1. to send or present an account for payment to (a person) 2. to advertise by posters 3. to schedule as a future programme: next week they will discuss what are billed as new ideas for economic reform 4. fit or fill the bill Informal to be suitable or adequate [Late Latin bulla document] bill 2 Noun the projecting jaws of a bird; beak Verb bill and coo (of lovers) to kiss and whisper amorously [Old English bile]
A ship's publication listing operational or administrative procedures.
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Noun | 1. | bill - a statute in draft before it becomes law; "they held a public hearing on the bill"rider - a clause that is appended to a legislative bill appropriation bill - a legislative act proposing to authorize the expenditure of public funds for a specified purpose bill of attainder - a legislative act finding a person guilty of treason or felony without a trial; "bills of attainder are prohibited by the Constitution of the United States" bottle bill - a statute that would require merchants to reclaim used bottles farm bill - a statute that would regulate farm production and prices trade bill - a statute that would regulate foreign trade law, jurisprudence - the collection of rules imposed by authority; "civilization presupposes respect for the law"; "the great problem for jurisprudence to allow freedom while enforcing order" | | 2. | bill - an itemized statement of money owed for goods shipped or services rendered; "he paid his bill and left"; "send me an account of what I owe"hotel bill - statement of charges for staying in a hotel tab, chit, check - the bill in a restaurant; "he asked the waiter for the check" | | 3. | bill - a piece of paper money (especially one issued by a central bank); "he peeled off five one-thousand-zloty notes"silver certificate - formerly a bank note issued by the United States Treasury and redeemable in silver | | 4. | bill - the entertainment offered at a public presentationprogramme, program - a performance (or series of performances) at a public presentation; "the program lasted more than two hours" | | 5. | bill - an advertisement (usually printed on a page or in a leaflet) intended for wide distribution; "he mailed the circular to all subscribers"stuffer - an advertising circular that is enclosed with other material and (usually) sent by mail | | 6. | bill - a sign posted in a public place as an advertisement; "a poster advertised the coming attractions"sign - a public display of a message; "he posted signs in all the shop windows" flash card, flashcard - a card with words or numbers or pictures that is flashed to a class by the teacher | | 7. | bill - a list of particulars (as a playbill or bill of fare)list, listing - a database containing an ordered array of items (names or topics) bill of entry - a list of goods received at a customhouse for export or import playbill - a theatrical program; "he couldn't find her name on the playbill" | | 8. | bill - a long-handled saw with a curved blade; "he used a bill to prune branches off of the tree"saw - hand tool having a toothed blade for cutting | | 9. | bill - a brim that projects to the front to shade the eyes; "he pulled down the bill of his cap and trudged ahead"brim - a circular projection that sticks outward from the crown of a hat | | 10. | bill - horny projecting mouth of a birdbird - warm-blooded egg-laying vertebrates characterized by feathers and forelimbs modified as wings cere - the fleshy, waxy covering at the base of the upper beak of some birds mouth - the externally visible part of the oral cavity on the face and the system of organs surrounding the opening; "she wiped lipstick from her mouth" | | Verb | 1. | bill - demand payment; "Will I get charged for this service?"; "We were billed for 4 nights in the hotel, although we stayed only 3 nights"tithe - exact a tithe from; "The church was tithed" assess - charge (a person or a property) with a payment, such as a tax or a fine surcharge - charge an extra fee, as for a special service invoice - send an bill to; "She invoiced the company for her expenses" charge - enter a certain amount as a charge; "he charged me $15" | | 2. | bill - advertise especially by posters or placards; "He was billed as the greatest tenor since Caruso"advertize, advertise, promote, push - make publicity for; try to sell (a product); "The salesman is aggressively pushing the new computer model"; "The company is heavily advertizing their new laptops" | | 3. | bill - publicize or announce by placardspost - publicize with, or as if with, a poster; "I'll post the news on the bulletin board" |
bill 1 noun 1. charges, rate, costs, score, account, damage ( informal) statement, reckoning, expense, tally, invoice, note of charge noun 2. act of parliament, measure, proposal, piece of legislation, projected law bill 2
Translations bill [bɪl] n → note f, facture f; (Theat);
bill [bɪl] n → Rechnung f; bill of sale → Verkaufsurkunde f
bill [bɪl] n ( in hotel, restaurant) → conto; to fit or fill the bill ( fig) → fare al caso;
bill1n bill [bil]a bird's beak a bird with a yellow bill. snawel مِنْقار човка zobák næb der Schnabel ράμφος pico nokk نوک nokka bec מָקוֹר चोंच ptičji kljun csőr paruh fuglsnef, goggur becco くちばし 부리 snapas knābis paruh snavel nebb dziób bico cioc клюв zobák kljun kljun näbb ปากนก gaga (鳥類)喙 дзьоб زرد چونچ والا پرندہ mỏ (chim) (鸟类)喙
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