Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
I was 11 years old and had money to burn.
"Another casual reference to being used to have money to burn."
I still don't see the need unless you have money to burn.
Well all I can say is he must have money to burn!'
"Oh, some might actually be happy, but they're the ones who have money to burn.
I'd love to buy new clothes, but I don't have money to burn.
He had money to burn and that was decisive in keeping him on a long vacation.
Ernie was, after all, just a college student, and didn't have money to burn.
Any sane person who does not have money to burn will be renting or living with relatives in 2010 then.
Clearly a man who had money to burn.
Single, they have money to burn, but once burned themselves, they are cautious.
They represent an enormous new market of special needs because they are getting older and have money to burn.
"Well, for one reason, we have money to burn.
Because people in the movie world have money to burn, and prefer exclusive parties, the event turned into a hot ticket.
If he and his wife find that they have money to burn, he said, "we'd rather give it to charity."
Being between jobs, he had the time, and he had money to burn.
I was fairly upfront that I had money to burn.
If you say somebody has money to burn, they think that person really sets fire to money."
"I thought the guy had money to burn, but he certainly didn't burn any around here."
If I had money to burn I might try to find a couple that fit well.
Well, to hell with it-soon I'll have money to burn."
"Some of these farmer have money to burn.
If the paper was called Kommersant then, they reasoned, it must have money to burn.
One would think he didn't have money to burn the way he cogitated over every hand.
If what the tragic man is legendary for is his virility, and he seems to have money to burn.