Bankroll in a sentence as a noun

Worked that up to around $20kish, kept that as a bankroll, and played in the 5/10-30/60 range, whatever games were good.

Every bet affected your bankroll based on your % invested relative to the total bankroll.

It's bad to have the rich ride around in their own private shuttles, but it's also bad for the rich to bankroll public busses they never use. Neither is a path to building a sustainable, functioning city.

Several withdrew their invested bankroll just to "play around" and fell in the same inevitable fashion.

But when you own the City's popular basketball team, bring home a championship and bankroll citywide celebrations no jury will convict you!

This can be more of a reflection on their bankroll which should be less of an issue as you move further up the client food-chain.- I hate to admit this, but damn that was lonely.

Google definitely has the bankroll and patent magazine to go toe-to-toe with them, which could open up a lot of options in the higher education space.

Bankroll in a sentence as a verb

You can't do all of the liberal **** San Francisco's municipal government wants to do without a bunch of "2%" types whose taxes can bankroll the whole endeavor.

It became a drag to play so I avoided it and tried to reduce playing to the minimum necessary--which ended up putting strain on the bankroll during bad patches.

I think the reason I didn't suffer from these techniques was:Chinese Gold Farmer method: You needed as large a bankroll as myself and you needed to buy enough avian meat to last the month.

If you have the right connections and someone willing to bankroll you, you can coast through school, get into a top university, and coast your way into a high-paying job that your connections arranged for you.

Practically none are coders or hustlers, they get their parents to bankroll a clone a cookie-cutter startup and take advantage of the wage slave condition of engineers over there, after all what are those poor souls going to do?

I didn't mind people selling buffs in small quantities because I knew they would run out after a few days whereas I could sell continuously through the whole month - and once the other vendors started running out, I jacked my prices up again further building my bankroll and cementing my position for the next cycle.

Bankroll definitions

noun

a roll of currency notes (often taken as the resources of a person or business etc.); "he shot his roll on a bob-tailed nag"

See also: roll

verb

provide with sufficient funds; finance; "Who will bankroll the restoration of the former East German economy?"