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make a fortune
verb as in line one's pockets
verb as in succeed
Strongest matches
Strong matches
Example Sentences
Jim Simons, a math prodigy who gave up an academic career to make a fortune with the world’s first quantitative investing firm, died last week at the age of 86 at his home in New York City after a battle with lung cancer.
“All the air is getting sucked out of the room by these for-profit companies who say, ‘Wow, this stuff is awesome, if I could patent it I’d make a fortune.’”
The publisher was founded by Alexander Grosset, a shy Scotsman who teamed up with George Dunlap, a gregarious Pennsylvania transplant, to raise $1,000 in order to establish a hardcover reprint house that would make a fortune peddling the likes of Rudyard Kipling and Zane Grey before taking aim at the burgeoning children’s literature marketplace.
In retrospect it was a perfect pitch for cryptocurrency speculators who wanted to believe that they, too, could make a fortune without any traditional financial background or connections.
They make a fortune per head smuggling migrants, including children, for the sex and slave trade.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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