bill

/bɪl/ (bre, ipa) · [bˈɪl] /bɪl/ (ame, ipa) · [bˈɪl] /ˈbil/ (ame, mw)

bill — noun

  • billsingular
  • billsplural

1. a paper or digital notice showing the money you owe after buying something or re

1.名詞B1
釋義

a paper or digital notice showing the money you owe after buying something or receiving work

例句

The repair bill arrived by email before Sahil left the garage.

service bill sent to a customer

Nia checked the hotel bill and questioned a charge for breakfast.

同義詞
  • invoice

    more formal, especially in business settings

文法句型

pay a bill

ask for the bill

bill for + service

用法筆記

Common for both paper and electronic requests for payment. In restaurants, ask for the bill when you want to pay before leaving.

2. the cost that someone has to pay in a particular situation, especially in fixed

2.名詞B2
釋義

the cost that someone has to pay in a particular situation, especially in fixed phrases

例句

William footed the bill when the team missed its travel refund.

phrase: foot the bill

Their company picked up the bill for the drivers' late dinner.

同義詞
  • cost

    broader and more general than this fixed-phrase use

文法句型

foot the bill

pick up the bill

cover the bill

用法筆記

Usually appears in expressions such as foot the bill or pick up the bill, rather than as a plain count noun.

3. a written proposal for a law that lawmakers discuss and vote on

3.名詞B2
釋義

a written proposal for a law that lawmakers discuss and vote on

例句

Lawmakers delayed the housing bill after new cost figures appeared.

government bill under debate

Jessica read the climate bill before speaking at the town meeting.

同義詞
  • measure

    common in political reporting for a proposed law

文法句型

introduce a bill

debate a bill

pass a bill

4. a paper note used as money

4.名詞A2
釋義

a paper note used as money

例句

Ryo handed the driver a twenty-dollar bill and kept the coins.

paper money amount: a twenty-dollar bill

A damp five-pound bill stuck to the bottom of Anna's bag.

同義詞
  • note

    more common in British English for paper money

文法句型

a ten-dollar bill

fold a bill

count bills

用法筆記

Especially common in American English for paper money of a stated value.

5. a printed sheet that advertises a public event or shows what will be performed

5.名詞B2
釋義

a printed sheet that advertises a public event or shows what will be performed

例句

A bright bill for the puppet show covered the library window.

bill as an event poster

Stefan kept the opera bill as a souvenir from Vienna.

同義詞
  • poster

    the usual modern word for a public advertising sheet

文法句型

post a bill

print a bill

theatre bill

用法筆記

Often sounds old-fashioned outside theatre or historical contexts. Modern everyday English more often uses poster or program.

6. the list of performers or acts announced for a show, or a place on that list

6.名詞C1
釋義

the list of performers or acts announced for a show, or a place on that list

例句

Two student choirs were added to the bill after noon.

phrase: added to the bill

Noa saw her cousin's band low on the festival bill.

文法句型

on the bill

add to the bill

festival bill

用法筆記

Most often appears in phrases such as on the bill or added to the bill.

7. the highest place on a show's list of performers, showing who the main act is

7.名詞C1
釋義

the highest place on a show's list of performers, showing who the main act is

例句

Felipe took top bill at the summer jazz festival.

phrase: take top bill

Her name was first on the bill for the holiday concert.

文法句型

top bill

take top bill

share top bill

用法筆記

Common in phrases such as top bill, take top bill, and share top bill.

8. the hard mouth part at the front of a bird's face

8.名詞B2
釋義

the hard mouth part at the front of a bird's face

例句

The gull tapped its bill against the glass by the pier.

bird using its bill

Yuki watched the duck lift weeds from the pond with its bill.

同義詞
  • beak

    the more usual everyday word

文法句型

tap with its bill

open with its bill

9. the stiff piece above the eyes on a cap, also called a visor

9.名詞B2
釋義

the stiff piece above the eyes on a cap, also called a visor

例句

Sunlight slipped under Mateo's bill as he looked west.

bill of a cap

Otis bent the bill of his cap to block the rain.

文法句型

bend the bill

bill of a cap

用法筆記

Especially common in American English for the front projecting part of a cap.

10. the police, especially when people speak in an informal British way

10.名詞C1
釋義

the police, especially when people speak in an informal British way

例句

The boys ran when they saw the bill at the alley entrance.

British informal: the bill

Locals said the bill had already sealed off the bridge.

同義詞
  • police

    neutral everyday word without the informal British tone

文法句型

call the bill

the bill arrived

用法筆記

A British informal term. It sounds dated or regional in some contexts and is rare in American English.

bill — verb