Spent Meaning

From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English spend spend 1 / spend / S1 W1 verb (past tense and past participle spent / spent /) 1 money intransitive, transitive SPEND MONEY to use your money to pay for goods or services I can’t afford to spend any more money this week. Spend £5/$10 etc I only want to spend about $20. Spend something on.

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  1. intransitive/transitive to use money to pay for things
    spend for:

    This year we will spend more money for medicalcare.

    spend something doing something:

    They spent about $600 justrebuilding the front porch.

    spend something on something:

    We’re spending a lot more on food than we used to.

    ..
  2. transitive to stay somewhere or to do something for a period of time
    spend something doing something (with someone):

    I’ll need to spend an hourrehearsing with the cast.

    spend time on something:

    How much time do you spend on homework?

    spend something with someone:

    I’m going to spend Thanksgiving with my family.

    ..
  3. transitive often passiveto use your time, effort, or energy to do something

    Considerableenergy is spent on making the costumeslookperfect.

    ..
    ..
When you use spend with another verb, to talk about how someone uses their time or their money, use the -ing form of the verb, not the infinitive.
✗ Some people spend a lot of time to watch TV during the day.
✓ Some people spend a lot of time watching TV during the day.
✗ Many young people spend the whole day to play online games.
✓ Many young people spend the whole day playing online games.
When spend time or spend money is followed by a noun, use the preposition on, not “for” or “in”:
✗ This money could be spent for other more important things.
✓ This money could be spent on other more important things.
✗ Students should consider their financial situation before they spend their money in extras.
✓ Students should consider their financial situation before they spend their money on extras.

This is the American English definition of spend.View British English definition of spend. I love hue game cheats.

Pronunciation /spent//spɛnt/

verb

adjective

  • 1Having been used and unable to be used again.

    • ‘Sir, we hear reports that North Korea is supposedly claiming to have reprocessed all of its spent nuclear fuel rods.’
    • ‘He added it would increase pressure on the British Government to shut down the reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel rods at Sellafield.’
    • ‘We think the preponderance of evidence does show that in fact Yucca Mountain is a suitable site for spent fuel disposal.’
    • ‘A spent shell fired from a revolver was recovered at the scene.’
    • ‘Flowers and notes were left outside his home yesterday, where investigators found several spent bullet cartridges.’
    • ‘Turn the Polaroid over and that space keeps the spent pod, emptied of its seminal jelly when ejected from the camera.’
    • ‘A third repeat following this resulted in the disappearance of the spent energy beam.’
    used up, consumed, exhausted, finished, depleted, drained, emptied
    View synonyms
    1. 1.1Having no power or energy left.
      • ‘Finally, half an hour later, spent of all her energy, she climbed out of her tub.’
      • ‘Tyrone then seemed a spent force but boy did they recover.’
      • ‘It has been a topsy-turvy league and Cavan are no spent force.’
      • ‘I'm not saying Kilkenny are a spent force by any means but they are beatable as Waterford and Galway both proved in the last couple of weeks.’
      • ‘By 1981, when he won the presidency, it was a thing of the past, and the Party a spent force.’
      • ‘They are a spent force, only coming out of hibernation to latch on to the topical issue of the day.’
      • ‘Armagh struck me as a tired team and may be a spent force.’
      • ‘No wonder One Nation's vote in the last federal election declined substantially - it's a spent force.’
      • ‘Yet the IRA's transformation into a local policing outfit shows that, as a guerrilla army that threatens war, it is a spent force.’
      • ‘I think as the two senators said earlier, that he is largely a spent force.’
      • ‘We're pretty desperate here in Britain, where our old-fashioned notion of dating is a spent force.’
      • ‘It was an impressive display of power for a conservative subgroup that had been thought of as a spent force.’
      • ‘In Twickenham, those who felt that England were a spent force on the international stage got their answer.’
      • ‘By then O'Sullivan was a spent force having fallen out of contention at 16 miles.’
      • ‘These words at least pay lip service to the realisation that neo-liberal economics are a spent force.’
      • ‘Today he is almost certainly another spent force where the biggest occasions are concerned.’
      • ‘In the meantime, Galway are back through the back door and are not a spent force.’
      • ‘We keep chopping and changing board presidents, who to my mind are all spent forces.’
      • ‘Today, religion is a private matter, politicians are not expected to be saints and the church is a spent political force.’
      • ‘In the later 1920s, and especially in the 30s, modernism seemed a spent force.’
      exhausted, tired, tired out, weary, wearied, worn out, dog-tired, bone-tired, bone-weary, on one's last legs, drained, fatigued, ready to drop, enervated, debilitated, limp
      View synonyms

Pronunciation

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