What's the difference between expender and spender?
Expender
Definition:
Example Sentences:
Spender
Definition:
(n.) One who spends; esp., one who spends lavishly; a prodigal; a spendthrift.
Example Sentences:
(1) Many shops are now catering to these high spenders.
(2) For every “coterie” of Audens, Spenders and Isherwoods, there is a chorus of George Orwells, Roy Campbells and Dylan Thomases, spitting vitriol.
(3) If the rest of the world assumes that the US is once again going to become the world's spender of last resort it is seriously mistaken.
(4) As Stephen Spender wrote in a review, "Vidal's essays celebrate the triumphs of private values over the public ones of power.
(5) Hollande's proposals were also eagerly awaited by the Sarkozy camp, hoping to discredit the Socialists as big spenders at a time when public money is scarce.
(6) "From being driven, careless, impulsive, the new breed of shopper is a very careful spender.
(7) Some of the biggest spenders were not included in Friday's reports because, technically, they are not considered campaign operations.
(8) "Historically, the main photographic moment for the project was 1937 to 1938," says Roberts, "and it was Spender who emerged as the poet-photographer of the group, merging press photography and British documentary realism in a way that often nods to Brassaï and surrealism.
(9) Now Saudi Arabia is the mark; one of the most repressive tyrannies on the planet which already has one of the largest stocks of armaments (at $48bn, it was the seventh largest military spender in 2011).
(10) Britain remains the fourth-biggest military spender in the world, but the very scale of that spending – currently £34bn a year – makes it a tempting target for Whitehall economisers.
(11) All the debt ceiling ends up becoming is a political football used by the opposition party to suggest the government are profligate spenders.
(12) There, Bowles came into contact with Stephen Spender, Christopher Isherwood and Jean Ross, Isherwood's model for Sally Bowles in Goodbye to Berlin.
(13) By the age of 18, the charismatic, talented young man with a famous name had attracted friends such as Stephen Spender and the wealthy collector and patron Peter Watson.
(14) King said the government would have to put the public finances on a more sustainable footing and warned people that they would have to become savers rather than spenders in the years ahead.
(15) Paradoxically, though, Spender's photographs , which are now recognised as an important part of the Mass Observation archive, were never used at the time.
(16) In her seminal treatise Man Made Language , the feminist theorist Dale Spender makes the argument that language is a system that embodies sexual inequality.
(17) The Nature Conservancy, by far the biggest spender on lobbying among environment groups, spent $850,000.
(18) Apart from Sturgeon (whose record the others don’t know much about) he was the only incumbent defending his government (surprise, surprise, Clegg was bent on Tory-bashing) and kept saying all his rivals are high-tax-and-spenders.
(19) The average expenditure for the top 1 percent of spenders in 1987 was $47,331.
(20) Julie Gardner, the former head of drama for BBC Wales and Doctor Who executive, who is now working in the US, emerged as the second highest spender on hospitality overall, claiming £7,764.51 in 2008-09, just £276.22 less than the director general.