What part of speech is budgets?

Budgets can be categorized as a noun and a verb.

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Parts of speech

  • 1. budgets is a verb, present, 3rd person singular of budget (infinitive).
  • 2. budgets is a noun, plural of budget.

Inflections

Verb

Noun

What does budgets mean?

Definitions

Verb

budget - make a budget

Noun

budget - a sum of money allocated for a particular purpose; "the laboratory runs on a budget of a million a year"
budget - a summary of intended expenditures along with proposals for how to meet them; "the president submitted the annual budget to Congress"

Examples of budgets

#   Sentence  
1. noun You who watch as budgets are cut in education and health care while you militarize a police force?
2. noun Foz on the Brazilian side is the larger town, however both are geared up to cater for visitors to the Waterfalls and National Parks, and so offer a range of accommodation for all budgets.
3. noun The President’s top priority remains ensuring middle class Americans feel secure in their jobs, homes and budgets.
4. noun Many independent films are made on low budgets.
5. noun Under Bouteflika, corrupt officials siphoned millions off public budgets.
6. noun The laboratory runs on a budget of a million a year.
7. noun The president submitted the annual budget to Congress.
8. noun I am available after Rick's Friday budget meeting...are you available then?
9. noun I am free at 8am on Friday before Rick's budget meeting.
10. noun The most important question isn't whether Discovery is technically ready to fly with new safety features and emergency procedures, but whether the agency itself has learned from the crucial errors most common to Challenger and Columbia, errors that grew out of a management culture that discouraged criticism and sacrificed safety for image-puffing and budget-cutting.
11. noun "National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA): is funded at $16.379 billion, an increase of $200 million over the FY04 enacted level, and a reduction of $665 million from the budget request.
12. noun Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation (NRC): is funded at $115 million, the same as FY04 and the budget request."
13. noun "The Senate Appropriations Committee used a somewhat controversial technique Tuesday to increase NASA's fiscal year 2005 budget by $200 million over what President Bush requested.
14. noun "They are not going to rush it, because they don't want it to be a budget buster.
15. noun Two vaunted economists - one a Nobel Prize winner and the other a nationally renowned budget expert - have analyzed the data at hand and put a price tag on the Iraq occupation.
Sentence  
noun
You who watch as budgets are cut in education and health care while you militarize a police force?
Foz on the Brazilian side is the larger town, however both are geared up to cater for visitors to the Waterfalls and National Parks, and so offer a range of accommodation for all budgets.
The President’s top priority remains ensuring middle class Americans feel secure in their jobs, homes and budgets.
Many independent films are made on low budgets.
Under Bouteflika, corrupt officials siphoned millions off public budgets.
The laboratory runs on a budget of a million a year.
The president submitted the annual budget to Congress.
I am available after Rick's Friday budget meeting...are you available then?
I am free at 8am on Friday before Rick's budget meeting.
The most important question isn't whether Discovery is technically ready to fly with new safety features and emergency procedures, but whether the agency itself has learned from the crucial errors most common to Challenger and Columbia, errors that grew out of a management culture that discouraged criticism and sacrificed safety for image-puffing and budget-cutting.
"National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA): is funded at $16.379 billion, an increase of $200 million over the FY04 enacted level, and a reduction of $665 million from the budget request.
Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation (NRC): is funded at $115 million, the same as FY04 and the budget request."
"The Senate Appropriations Committee used a somewhat controversial technique Tuesday to increase NASA's fiscal year 2005 budget by $200 million over what President Bush requested.
"They are not going to rush it, because they don't want it to be a budget buster.
Two vaunted economists - one a Nobel Prize winner and the other a nationally renowned budget expert - have analyzed the data at hand and put a price tag on the Iraq occupation.

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