adinerado
adj.
wealthy, moneyed, well to do
adinerar
v.
enrich, make rich
adinerarse
v.
become rich
adinerado
= affluent, monied, well-heeled, well-to-do, moneyed, solvent.
Ex: It is easy to predict that a majority of either large or affluent libraries in this country will employ some form of catalog under machine control in the foreseeable future.
Ex: This will shift the dynamics of information flow to policymakers to favour monied special interests, which threatens the democratic process.
Ex: This class is conservative in politics, aristocratic in social affairs, and characteristically well-bred, well-educated, well-housed, and well-heeled.
Ex: Librarians deny that only the young and well-to-do use music libraries.
Ex: It is generally recognized that collecting money from moneyed deadbeats is as much a social problem as street thuggery.
Ex: Botswana is a stable, well-governed and solvent country but is nevertheless a good example of the deep-seated problems of regulating information transfer.