coffer - use in sentences

Object

  • ceiling: The interior of the dome is a coffered ceiling with an oculus, open to the sky, at the top.

Converse of object

  • replenish: Little or no expense can ever be necessary for replenishing the coffers of such a bank.
  • swell: The city council had trebled the number of taxis on the streets to swell the city coffers with license money.
  • fill: Despite being desperate to fill the state coffers, Sarkozy kept the fee the same.
  • boost: Drivers are already furious at the rising number of speed camera fines which are boosting police coffers.

Adjective modifier

  • royal: With royal coffers at his disposal, Robert Vertue could ornament with a lavish hand.
  • empty: The coming general election will be expensive, and we are starting with rather empty coffers.
  • central: The Labor Party had asked the GMB to consider contributing an extra £ 744,000 to the Party's central coffers.
  • national: Are they to carry on their litigation at the expense of the national coffers?
  • public: The park tops an underground carpark for 10,000 cars, the revenues from which will return to the public coffers.
  • own: The 35-year old says he would prefer to have a big turn-out at Molineux for his big day rather than swell his own coffers.

Modifies a noun

  • dam: The 1100 m long wall consists of a sheet piled coffer dam, infilled with mass concrete.

Noun used with modifier

  • government: The net result to the government coffers should be a small decrease.
  • council: The only problem was that the job came in £ 15m over budget, all of which had to be met from council coffers.
  • state: Of course, with the nationalization of the oil industry in 1972 a lot of money poured into state coffers.
  • party: This in turn has plunged party coffers into crisis.

Possessives

  • chancellor: The effect of the change - based on revised data - is to add an extra £ 10bn to the chancellor's coffers.
  • club: And he's still a regular contributor to the club's coffers.
  • government: Each pound we spend adds to the bottom line of the government's coffers.

Preposition: of

  • company: Today this means that the greatest part of Britain's NHS budget goes straight into the coffers of pharmaceutical companies.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.