Definition
The needlessly pretentious plural of money that lawyers and accountants deploy to sound more important when discussing multiple payments or funds. It's what happens when 'money' isn't fancy enough for your legal documents, so you dust off this archaic form that makes you sound like a Victorian banker. Because apparently 'various sums of money' doesn't convey enough gravitas when you're billing $800 an hour.
Example Usage
The trust agreement specified that monies from the estate would be distributed to beneficiaries in quarterly installments, because saying 'money' twice was apparently beneath us.
Source: Legal and financial terminology
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See “monies” in Corporate Speak, Gen-Z Slang, Pirate Speak, and more.
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afaiaa
As Far As I Am Aware...