disbursal

disbursal — noun

1. the act of giving money out of a fund, account, or collected pool, especially fo

1.名詞C1
釋義

the act of giving money out of a fund, account, or collected pool, especially for a planned purpose such as paying workers, covering project costs, or making loans

例句

Wei tracked every disbursal from the school's scholarship fund in a simple notebook.

collocation: tracked every disbursal (from [fund])

Loan disbursal was delayed while the bank reviewed Camila's application documents.

passive: loan disbursal was delayed / collocation: loan disbursal

同義詞
  • payment

    much broader and more common; any act of giving money for goods, services, or debts

  • disbursement

    nearly identical in meaning; slightly more common in business writing

  • payout

    less formal; often used for insurance claims, lottery winnings, or one-off sums

  • outlay

    stresses spending money as an investment or expense rather than the act of distribution

反義詞
  • collection

    the act of gathering or receiving money (the opposite direction of flow)

  • deposit

    putting money into an account rather than taking it out

用法筆記

Frequently used with a prepositional phrase introduced by 'of' that specifies the origin or purpose of the money (e.g., 'disbursal of scholarship funds', 'disbursal for repairs'). This noun is typical in formal financial, governmental, and institutional contexts rather than in everyday conversation about personal spending.

常見錯誤

She handled the disbursal of cash from her wallet.
The accountant handled the disbursal of cash from the company's payroll account.
💡'Disbursal' is too formal for personal pocket money; use it for institutional or organisational payments from a designated fund.