From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishmonthlymonth‧ly1 /ˈmʌnθli/ ●●○ adjective [only before noun] 1 REGULARhappening once a month The mortgage is payable in monthly instalments. a monthly publication2 AMOUNTused to talk about the total amount of something that is received, paid, measured, or calculated in a month a monthly salary of $850 a monthly rainfall of four inches3 DURINGa monthly ticket, pass etc can be used for a period of one month —monthly adverb They meet monthly to discuss progress.
Examples from the Corpus
monthly• A loan of £30,000 would add more than 7 percent to a monthly £298.22.• And they gave monthly and quarterly awards to the best drivers.• But he wants to track its ups and downs on a monthly basis.• The average monthly bill per customer is declining as the industry woos newcomers who want a cellular phone mainly for emergencies.• The monthly charge is $ 40 for current cable subscribers and $ 60 for nonsubscribers.• a monthly commuter train ticket• a monthly credit card payment• a monthly income of $3,750• A new monthly magazine Wessex Architect was launched and used to promote a wide range of events.• a monthly magazine• a monthly meeting• Cuttings that should come to everybody's attention quickly can be pinned to the library noticeboard or contained in a monthly newsletter.• In the first year of the plan, the government will pay 30 percent of their monthly payments.monthlymonthly2 noun (plural monthlies) [countable] TCNa magazine that appears once a month a leading women’s monthlyExamples from the Corpus
monthly• Commercial journals, particularly the weeklies and monthlies, can take rapid decisions, and have a faster turn-round time.