Mishelly ²º¹¹
what is the difference between 'I want to withdraw 200 dollars' and 'I want to draw 200 dollars'? what is the difference between 'I want to withdraw 200 dollars' and 'I want to draw 200 dollars'? can sb help me ?
Nov 21, 2011 4:57 PM
Answers · 9
3
Actually, you can use either. You can draw money from an account and you can also withdraw. It is not always the same, though. If you are receiving a pension, you would say that you are drawing a pension. You would not use withdraw in this case. Withdraw is clearer to some people, but is not any more correct, grammatically - at least when we refer to taking money out of some account.
November 21, 2011
2
In a bank or other financial institution, "draw" is understood to mean withdraw. One of the definitions of draw is to get, take or receive from a source. It is this definition that relates to "Drwaing money from a bank account."
November 21, 2011
1
we use withdraw to talk about getting your own money from your bank account or from a distributor machine but draw is when you make pictures by paintings etc..
November 21, 2011
"To withdraw" means the bank transaction where you take money from your account. "To draw" means either to make an illustration, but it can also mean "to pull". When used in the context of a bank, you could say, "I want to *draw out* 200 dollars." You need the phrasal verb here to be clear.
November 21, 2011
good quesiton i need some one to answer thi .
November 21, 2011
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