How to Use war chest in a Sentence
war chest
noun- The candidate held fund-raising dinners to build up his war chest.
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The war chest to fund the event holds almost $250 million.
— Ananya Bhattacharya, Quartz, 7 June 2023 -
Still, Hawley's war chest is more than twice the size of Kunce's.
— Samantha Liss, CBS News, 9 May 2024 -
Still, Hawley’s war chest is more than twice the size of Kunce’s.
— Tribune News Service, Hartford Courant, 21 May 2024 -
The aim is to shrink Mr. Putin’s war chest while keeping prices from new highs.
— Joe Wallace and Anna Hirtenstein, WSJ, 29 Aug. 2022 -
But Oye is building a war chest to bankroll the battle.
— Simran Vaswani, Forbes, 16 June 2022 -
And so, Iger and Disney took back those rights, and sought to create a new war chest of IP.
— Alex Weprin, The Hollywood Reporter, 27 Jan. 2022 -
So not too far apart there, but, uh, Yost has more than a million in his war chest.
— Laura Johnston, cleveland, 2 Nov. 2022 -
The slowdown of oil sales also put a major dent in the Kremlin’s war chest.
— Jeremy Beaman, Washington Examiner, 9 Jan. 2023 -
The freeze rendered half of the more than $600 billion in Putin’s war chest unusable.
— Josh Boak, Chron, 20 Mar. 2022 -
That left Patrick’s campaign with a $22.2 million war chest.
— Lauren McGaughy, Dallas News, 18 July 2023 -
Both sides have sizable war chests to carry a deep strike.
— Patrik Jonsson, The Christian Science Monitor, 14 Sep. 2023 -
And he's headed into the summer with a war chest of just over $4 million.
— Lawrence Andrea, Journal Sentinel, 16 Apr. 2024 -
Davis is also sitting on a campaign war chest that could be hard to beat.
— Melissa Holzberg Depalo, CNN, 21 Feb. 2022 -
And the two-term senator has a war chest six times larger than the GOP field of candidates.
— Bryan Schott, The Salt Lake Tribune, 13 Apr. 2022 -
Big pharma has brought its war chest to protect the status quo.
— WSJ, 8 Aug. 2022 -
In the governor's race, McCormick has just a fraction of Braun's war chest.
— Hayleigh Colombo, The Indianapolis Star, 9 July 2024 -
Three of the groups are also deploying their war chests to try to rack up legal wins.
— Lauren Weber, Washington Post, 21 Feb. 2024 -
Trump ended June with the largest campaign war chest in the GOP primary with $22.5 million left to spend on the race.
— Chuck Todd, NBC News, 17 July 2023 -
In the years before invading Ukraine, Russia amassed a war chest of gold.
— Matt Egan, CNN, 8 Dec. 2022 -
Both campaigns have been building huge war chests to blanket the airwaves in the coming months.
— Zac Anderson, USA TODAY, 28 June 2024 -
Those gift card expenses were paid not by the PAC, but by the campaign itself, which had its own war chest.
— Ben Wieder, Miami Herald, 10 Feb. 2024 -
Trump had a much larger war chest, his campaign filing showed.
— Karissa Waddick, USA TODAY, 25 Feb. 2024 -
Even with all the legal expenditures, the RNC has continued to build a huge war chest over the past year.
— Soo Rin Kim, ABC News, 10 Jan. 2022 -
Cawthorn is fighting the onslaught of attack ads with a depleted war chest.
— Washington Post, 10 May 2022 -
But objections over Gaza do not appear to have put a dent in the president's war chest thus far.
— Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy, USA TODAY, 6 Apr. 2024 -
Its war chest is much fuller than anything the Syrian rebels ever had.
— Isaac Chotiner, The New Yorker, 9 Mar. 2022 -
Getting money into your war chest requires you to have a Roth.
— Leon Labrecque, Forbes, 4 Jan. 2022 -
Also in San Antonio's war chest is a 2027 unprotected first from the Atlanta Hawks.
— Morten Stig Jensen, Forbes, 26 Sep. 2024 -
So, being able to transfer his war chest over into her campaign is just really crucial for her.
— Taylor Wilson, USA TODAY, 31 July 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'war chest.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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