0 rich: --
[ before noun ] a well-off neighbourhood
Her family was very well off.
1 having a lot of or a number of: --
3 wealthy --
4 rich: --
Attempts to encourage less well-off workers to take early retirement often promote a transition into a worse situation.
I had thought that this food would be shared with those who were less well-off in the neighbourhood.
In general terms, administrators tended to come from the less well-off landed families.
Now, suppose that we must choose between benefiting a well-off person and benefiting a badly-off person.
A disproportionate percentage of indigenous testaments represent the established nobility and the well-off, as might be expected.
In each parish there was a small group of yeomen, four or five well-off husbandmen or craftsmen and a number of poorer husbandmen.
The sources used pertain to the well-off, to the propertied and to an almost exclusively male world.
One might object that there are epistemically well-off exclusivists adhering to different religions.