0 having enough money to live comfortably -- thịnh vượng
She comes from a well-to-do family.
Despite being born into a fairly well-to-do family, the harsh deprivations he suffered in his youth likely planted in him feelings of alienation.
A more well-to-do applicant planned to use the timber from forty oaks, each about 150 years old, 'to repair his buildings, barns and stockyard'.
At first the practice was probably confined to the gentry and well-to-do who could afford physicians' and midwives' fees.
Older working-class women, for example, could get help with shopping, cleaning and cooking, help that the more well-to-do had always taken for granted.
The fourth village (4,000) has an older and less well-to-do population.
The conduct of the principals in these cases suggested the decadence and corruption of family life among the socially prominent and well-to-do.
Nor was the garden suburb envisaged as an enclave of the well-to-do.
Students who could not afford to pay the costly private fees felt alienated from their more well-to-do classmates.