Prefinance
noun
1.
the management of revenues; the conduct or transaction of money matters generally, especially those affecting the public, as in the fields of banking and investment.
2.
finances, the monetary resources, as of a government, company, organization, or individual; revenue.
verb (used with object), financed, financing.
3.
to supply with money or capital; obtain money or credit for.
verb (used without object), financed, financing.
4.
to raise money or capital needed for financial operations.
noun
1.
the system of money, credit, etc, esp with respect to government revenues and expenditures
2.
funds or the provision of funds
3.
(pl) funds; financial condition
verb
4.
(transitive) to provide or obtain funds, capital, or credit for
5.
(intransitive) to manage or secure financial resources
Read Also:
- Prefinished
adjective 1. coated or treated before use or sale: prefinished wood.
- Prefix
noun 1. Grammar. an affix placed before a word, base, or another prefix to modify a term’s meaning, as by making the term negative, as un- in unkind, by signaling repetition, as re- in reinvent, or by indicating support, as pro- in proabolition. Compatible prefixes can work together, as un- and re- in unrefundable. 2. […]
- Prefixal
noun 1. Grammar. an affix placed before a word, base, or another prefix to modify a term’s meaning, as by making the term negative, as un- in unkind, by signaling repetition, as re- in reinvent, or by indicating support, as pro- in proabolition. Compatible prefixes can work together, as un- and re- in unrefundable. 2. […]
- Prefixes
noun 1. Grammar. an affix placed before a word, base, or another prefix to modify a term’s meaning, as by making the term negative, as un- in unkind, by signaling repetition, as re- in reinvent, or by indicating support, as pro- in proabolition. Compatible prefixes can work together, as un- and re- in unrefundable. 2. […]
- Prefix notation
language (Or “prefix syntax”) One of the possible orderings of functions and operands: in prefix notation the function precedes all its operands. For example, what may normally be written as “1+2” becomes “(+ 1 2)”. A few languages (e.g., lisp) have strictly prefix syntax, many more employ prefix notation in combination with infix notation. Compare: […]