English Lesson to the Employee In ordinary usage "money" is a mass noun with a collective sense, and there is no need to pluralize it.
But in law and accounting, money is a countable noun which can be pluralized to express the idea of individual sum of money; in this case you can use both "moneys" and "monies". (Reference: CGEU)
Dear Uneducated Promoter of Kicking Horse, I have no problems teaching proper english to you and also expanding your weak vocabulary. Lesson two: Please look up the term imbicile
Investors, you know a company is flaky when their IR person never answers questions but just responds at a grade 4 level. The company should hire someone to redo their corporate presentation and also have them respond intelligently to questions of the company.
One simple question, how does company continue to operate when they are losing monies.