Noun
Coins of little value kept in one's pocket or bag.
(idiomatic) A sum of money considered small or insignificant.
Source: en.wiktionary.orgBetween 4.30pm on Saturday, may 5 and 8.20am on Sunday, someone went into a car parked in Hurstwood and took a pair of sunglasses and loose change from inside. Source: Internet
COINSTAR, which converts your loose change easily into usable vouchers, reports that the average American household has some $90 in loose change hiding in various places – the perfect kind of seed money to help fuel your summer “staycation.” Source: Internet
It is the same message the MFPD delivered after their last string of burglarlies: “Place burglary bait out of sight”--even small things, such as loose change or cigarette lighters, electronics adaptors and mounts. Source: Internet
I think I spent about £600 ukp to put in the whole system, which i agree is not loose change but was not much more than the mesh setups at the time, i think this will outlive those given you can update access points and so on. Source: Internet
At $30 million, Ryan could afford roughly one million acres and have loose change left over to rent a mover to get his stuff into outer space. Source: Internet
From there I walked the streets of downtown Baltimore asking people – like some homeless persons do – for a little loose change to buy a cup of coffee. Source: Internet