withdrawal
noun /wɪðˈdrɔːəl/, /wɪθˈdrɔːəl/
/wɪðˈdrɔːəl/, /wɪθˈdrɔːəl/
- You can make withdrawals of up to $250 a day.
- She made a withdrawal of £250 from her bank account.
Wordfinder- account
- balance
- bank
- credit
- debit
- deposit
- interest
- loan
- statement
- withdrawal
Collocations FinanceFinanceIncomeTopics Moneyc1- earn money/cash/(informal) a fortune/the minimum wage/a living wage
- make money/a fortune/(informal) a killing on the stock market
- acquire/inherit/amass wealth/a fortune
- build up funds/savings
- get/receive/leave (somebody) an inheritance/a legacy
- live on a low wage/a fixed income/a pension
- get/receive/draw/collect a pension
- depend/be dependent on (British English) benefits/(North American English) welfare/social security
- spend money/your savings/(informal) a fortune on…
- invest/put your savings in…
- throw away/waste/ (informal) shell out money on…
- lose your money/inheritance/pension
- use up/ (informal) wipe out all your savings
- pay (in) cash
- use/pay by a credit/debit/contactless card
- pay by/make out a/write somebody a/accept a (British English) cheque/(US English) check
- change/exchange money/currency
- give/pay/leave (somebody) a deposit
- have/hold/open/close/freeze a bank account/an account
- credit/debit/pay something into/take money out of your account
- deposit money/funds in your account
- withdraw money/cash/£30 from an ATM, etc.
- (formal) make a deposit/withdrawal
- find/go to/use (especially North American English) an ATM/(British English) a cash machine/dispenser
- be in credit/in debit/in the black/in the red/overdrawn
- use a mobile/an online banking app/platform/service
- manage/handle/plan/run/ (especially British English) sort out your finances
- plan/manage/work out/stick to a budget
- offer/extend credit (to somebody)
- arrange/take out a loan/an overdraft
- pay back/repay money/a loan/a debt
- pay for something in (especially British English) instalments/(North American English usually) installments
- get into debt/financial difficulties
- be short of/ (informal) be strapped for cash
- run out of/owe money
- face/get/ (informal) be landed with a bill for £…
- can’t afford the cost of…/payments/rent
- fall behind with/ (especially North American English) fall behind on the mortgage/repayments/rent
- incur/run up/accumulate debts
- tackle/reduce/settle your debts
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- cash
- ATM
- make
- withdrawal from
- the withdrawal of support
- the withdrawal of the UN troops from the region
- the withdrawal of a product from the market
Extra Examples- The UN were faced with an ignominious withdrawal or a long-term military presence.
- The party is calling for the phased withdrawal of troops from the island.
- The police were forced to make a tactical withdrawal.
- a withdrawal by government troops
- the army's withdrawal from the occupied territories
- US withdrawal from Vietnam
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- eventual
- imminent
- abrupt
- …
- advocate
- call for
- demand
- …
- withdrawal by
- withdrawal from
- his withdrawal from the election
- Britain’s withdrawal from the EU
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- eventual
- imminent
- abrupt
- …
- advocate
- call for
- demand
- …
- withdrawal by
- withdrawal from
- I got withdrawal symptoms after giving up smoking.
- withdrawal from something She was still suffering withdrawal from nicotine.
WordfinderTopics Social issuesc1, Illnessc1- abuse
- addict
- deal
- dependence
- detoxification
- drug
- hallucinate
- overdose
- rehab
- withdrawal
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- abrupt
- alcohol
- caffeine
- …
- go through
- suffer
- symptoms
- withdrawal from
- [countable, usually singular, uncountable] the act of saying that you no longer believe that something you have previously said is true synonym retraction
- The newspaper published a withdrawal the next day.
- [uncountable] (psychology) the behaviour of somebody who wants to be alone and does not want to communicate with other people
- She is showing signs of withdrawal and depression.