Primary
''bank'' ▫ᴱᴺ|Definition|1st|20260213210016-00-⌔
bank - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
English
Noun
bank (countable and uncountable, plural banks)
- (countable) An institution where one can place and borrow money and take care of financial affairs.
- ✤ Finance is seldom romantic. But the idea of peer-to-peer lending comes close. This is an industry that brings together individual savers and lenders on online platforms. […] Banks and credit-card firms are kept out of the picture. Talk to enough people in the field and someone is bound to mention the “democratisation of finance”.1
- (countable) A branch office of such an institution.
- ✤ Synonym: (archaic) Lombard house
- (countable) An underwriter or controller of a card game.
- ✤ Synonyms: banker, banque
- (countable) A fund from deposits or contributions, to be used in transacting business; a joint stock or capital.
- ✤ Let it be no bank or common stock, but every man be master of his own money.2
- (gambling, countable) The sum of money etc. which the dealer or banker has as a fund from which to draw stakes and pay losses.
- (slang, uncountable) Money; profit.
- ✤ Military dude was working for a drug dealer, right? and making good bank with it—he was making good money.3
- (countable) In certain games, such as dominos, a fund of pieces from which the players are allowed to draw.
- (countable, chiefly in combination) A safe and guaranteed place of storage for and retrieval of important items or goods.
- ✤ *blood bank; data bank; sperm bank *
- (countable) A device used to store coins or currency.
- ✤ If you want to buy a bicycle, you need to put the money in your piggy bank.
- (countable, music) A collection of instrument data on a digital synthesizer.
- ✤ All of the drum kits are on bank 1.
Verb
bank (third-person singular simple present banks, present participle banking, simple past and past participle banked)
- (intransitive) To deal with a bank or financial institution, or for an institution to provide financial services to a client.
- ✤ He banked with Barclays.
- ✤ the sort of face you would happily bank with4
- (transitive) To put into a bank.
- ✤ I’m going to bank the money.
- (transitive, slang) To conceal in the rectum for use in prison.
- ✤ Johnny banked some coke for me.
- (transitive, finance) To provide banking services to.
- ✤ They proposed an ambitious plan to bank people in remote rural communities.
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:bank.
Noun
bank (plural banks)
- (hydrology) An edge of river, lake, or other watercourse.
- (nautical, hydrology) An elevation under the sea; a shallow area of shifting sand, gravel, mud, and so forth
- ✤ Synonym: bar
- ✤ the banks of Newfoundland
- (geography) A slope of earth, sand, etc.; an embankment.
- (aviation) The incline of an aircraft, especially during a turn.
- (rail transport) An incline, a hill.
- ✤ This is the hardest duty on the railway, for the trains are heavy and there are some long 1 in 40 banks.8
- ✤ It’s just as quick out of the blocks. The five-car unit has three engines, giving it 2,820hp to play with, so the once-‘feared’ Devon banks of Hemerdon, Rattery and Dainton are child’s play to these trains.9
- A mass of clouds.
- ✤ The bank of clouds on the horizon announced the arrival of the predicted storm front.
- (mining) The face of the coal at which miners are working.
- (mining) A deposit of ore or coal, worked by excavations above water level.
- (mining) The ground at the top of a shaft.
- ✤ Ores are brought to bank.
Verb
bank (third-person singular simple present banks, present participle banking, simple past and past participle banked)
- (intransitive, aviation) To roll or incline laterally in order to turn.
- (transitive) To cause (an aircraft) to bank.
- (transitive) To form into a bank or heap, to bank up.
- ✤ to bank sand
- (intransitive, of clouds) To form a bank; to gather in masses.
- ✤ Synonym: bank up
- ✤ […] clouds banking above the gravel road, their flat slate-blue bottoms threatening freezing rain or an early snowfall.10
- (transitive) To cover the embers of a fire with ashes in order to retain heat.
- (transitive) To raise a mound or dike about; to enclose, defend, or fortify with a bank; to embank.
- ✤ Aristoma∣chus would haue them to be stript from their leaues in winter, & in any hand to be banked well about, that the water stand not there in any hollow furrow or hole lower than the other ground11
- (transitive, obsolete) To pass by the banks of.
- ✤ Have I not heard these islanders shout out/Vive le roi! as I have banked their towns?12
- (rail transport, UK) To provide additional power for a train ascending a bank (incline) by attaching another locomotive.
- ✤ Some interesting facts have recently been made known by the L.N.E.R. concerning the 178-ton Garratt 2-8-0 + 0-8-2 engine No. 2395, which since construction in 1925 has spent the whole of its working life banking coal trains up the 3 miles of 1 in 40 between Wentworth junction and West Silkstone, on the Worsborough branch, near Barnsley.13
- ✤ […] the 4-4-0 unhappily stalled after a stop on Reading Old Bank with its eight-coach load and the Reading Up Line pilot, a “Hall”, had to bank the train into Reading General.14
- ✤ Soon after leaving Bebra the line rises, mostly at 1 in 74, for 7 miles to Cornberg and all trains of over 400 tons are banked.15
Noun
bank (plural banks)
- A row or panel of items stored or grouped together.
- ✤ a bank of switches
- ✤ a bank of pay phones
- ✤ Wanderers were finally woken from their slumber when Kevin Davies brought a fine save out of Brad Guzan while, minutes after the restart, Klasnic was blocked out by a bank of Villa defenders.16
- A row of keys on a musical keyboard or the equivalent on a typewriter keyboard.
- (computing) A contiguous block of memory that is of fixed, hardware-dependent size, but often larger than a page and partitioning the memory such that two distinct banks do not overlap.
- (pinball) A set of multiple adjacent drop targets.
Verb
bank (third-person singular simple present banks, present participle banking, simple past and past participle banked)
- (transitive, order and arrangement) To arrange or order in a row.
Noun
bank (plural banks)
- A bench, as for rowers in a galley; also, a tier of oars.
- ✤ Placed on their banks, the lusty Trojans sweep/Neptune’s smooth face, and cleave the yielding deep.17
- A bench or seat for judges in court.
- The regular term of a court of law, or the full court sitting to hear arguments upon questions of law, as distinguished from a sitting at nisi prius, or a court held for jury trials. See banc18
- (archaic, printing) A kind of table used by printers.
- (music) A bench, or row of keys belonging to a keyboard, as in an organ.19
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation, General American without æ-raising) IPA: /ˈbæŋk/, [ˈbæŋk]
- (Standard Southern British, Northern England, Scotland, Wales) IPA: /ˈbaŋk/
- (US, Canada, æ-raising) IPA: /ˈbeɪ̯ŋk/, [ˈbeɪ̯ŋk] ~ [ˈbɛ̃ŋk]
- Audio (US, æ-raising): 🔊
- (Australian) IPA: /ˈbæːŋk/, [ˈbæːŋk], (æ-raising) [ˈbeːŋk]
- (New Zealand) IPA: /ˈbɛŋk/
- Rhymes: -æŋk
- Hyphenation: bank
Etymology 1
Inherited from Middle English banke, from Middle French banque, from Italian banca (“counter, moneychanger’s bench or table”), from Lombardic bank (“bench, counter”), from Proto-West Germanic ﹡banki, from Proto-Germanic ﹡bankiz (“bench, counter”), from Proto-Indo-European ﹡bʰeg- (“to turn, curve, bend, bow”). Doublet of bench, banc, and banco.
For the bench-bank relation, compare typologically Russian ла́вка (lávka), прила́вок (prilávok).
Etymology 2
From Middle English bank, banke, from Old English ﹡banca (“bench”) (attested in Old English hōbanca (“couch”) and Old English banc (“bank, hillock, embankment”), from Proto-West Germanic ﹡bankō, from Proto-Germanic ﹡bankô. Akin to Old Norse bakki (“elevation, hill”), Norwegian bakke (“slope, hill”).
Etymology 3
From Middle English bank, banke, from Old French banc (“bench”), from Frankish ﹡banki, from Proto-Germanic ﹡bankiz (“bench”). Akin to Old English benċ (“bench”).
Etymology 4
Probably from French banc. Of Germanic origin, and akin to English bench.
Printed 2026-06-28.
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Link to original Footnotes
2013 June 1, “End of the peer show”, in The Economist, volume 407, number 8838, page 71: ↩
1625, Francis[Bacon], “Of Usury”, in The Essayes […], 3rd edition, London: […] Iohn Haviland for Hanna Barret, →OCLC: ↩
2010, Paul Bouchard, Enlistment, page 113: ↩
1979, Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy: ↩
1599 (first performance), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Iulius Cæsar”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act I, scene i]: ↩
1943 June 8, “Jap Remnants Suffer Heavy Casualties: Alerts In Chungking”, in The Bombay Chronicle , volume XXXI, number 134, page 1: ↩
2014 September 16, Ian Jack, “Is this the end of Britishness”, in The Guardian: ↩
1940 December, O. S. M. Raw, “The Rhodesia Railways—II”, in Railway Magazine, page 640: ↩
2025 November 12, ‘Mystery Shopper’, “Is Devon the cream of the crop?”, in RAIL, number 1048, page 48: ↩
2011 December 14, Sandra Birdsell, The Chrome Suite, Emblem Editions, →ISBN: ↩
1601, C[aius] Plinius Secundus [i.e., Pliny the Elder], “”, in Philemon Holland, transl., The Historie of the World. Commonly Called, The Naturall Historie of C. Plinius Secundus. […],, London: […] Adam Islip, →OCLC: ↩
c. 1595, William Shakespeare, King John, act 5, scene 2: ↩
1942 March, “Notes and News: Locomotive Notes”, in Railway Magazine, page 93: ↩
1960 July, “Motive Power Miscellany: Western Region”, in Trains Illustrated, page 443: ↩
1960 September, P. Ransome-Wallis, “Modern motive power of the German Federal Railway: Part One”, in Trains Ilustrated, page 558: ↩
2011 December 10, Marc Higginson, “Bolton 1 - 2 Aston Villa”, in BBC Sport : ↩
1658, Edmund Waller, he Passion of Dido for Æneas: ↩
Alexander M[ansfield] Burrill (1850–1851), “BANK”, in A New Law Dictionary and Glossary: […], volume, New York, N.Y.: John S. Voorhies, […], →OCLC. ↩
Edward H[enry] Knight (1877), “Bank”, in Knight’s American Mechanical Dictionary. […], volumes I (A–GAS), New York, N.Y.: Hurd and Houghton […], →OCLC. ↩
Secondary
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