Bank metals
A business where people keep their money, borrow money, etc., or the building where such a business operates. Our paychecks are deposited/into the bank automatically. How much money do you have in the bank? My cousin works in/at a bank. I have to go to the bank today, often used before another noun,
bank customers. How much money do you have in your bank account? See also a savings bank, a small closed container in which money is saved. She saves all her change in a small bank on her desk; she also piggy bank where a particular thing is stored until it is needed; information is stored in a computer's memory banks[Britanica Dictionary]. A substance (such as gold, tin, or copper) that usually has a shiny appearance is a good conductor of electricity and heat, can be melted, and is usually capable of being shaped into scraps, strips, sheets, lumps, pieces of metal, a mixture of various kinds of metal, sculptors who work in metal and clay, a mixture of different metals. Gold is a metal often used before another noun, metal bowls, a metal roof[Britanica Dictionary]. US, the central bank is the Federal Reserve; in France the Banque de France; and in the UK the Bank of England. There are also international banks. The World Bank, or International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, is an investment bank at the international level. The nearest international equivalent to a central bank is the International Monetary Fund. The European Central Bank conducts monetary policy in the eurozone. The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is a European investment bank, similar to the World Bank at European[Oxford Reference]. A chemical element, such as iron or gold, or a mixture of such elements, such as steel, that is generally hard and strong, and through which electricity and heat can travel: Metal, paper, and glass can be recycled. Silver, gold, and platinum are precious metals. The wooden beam is reinforced with a metal plate. A generally hard and shiny chemical element, such as iron or gold, or a mixture of such elements, such as steel, which usually allows electricity and heat to travel through it [Cambridge Dictionary].
Metal.(2023)Cambridge dictionary. Retrieved from: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/metal
Black John, Hashimzade Nigar, and Myles Gareth. (2009). A Dictionary of Economics. Oxford Reference. Retrieved from: https://www.oxfordreference.com/search?q=bank&searchBtn=Search&isQuickSearch=true
Metal. Britannica Dictionary. Retrieved from: https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/-metal
Bank. Britannica Dictionary. Retrieved from: https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/bank