1 |
BorrowingThe amount that an entity, usually a country or its government, has borrowed. Thus often the national debt or the (negative of the) net foreign asset position.
|
2 |
BorrowingBorrowing is a sign of loss and meagre support. For a banker to dream of borrowing from another bank, a run on his own will leave him in a state of collapse, unless he accepts this warning. If another borrows from you, help in time of need will be extended or offered you. True friends will attend you.
|
3 |
BorrowingBorrowing money which you will need to pay back. Typically when anyone lends you money (unless it is a friend) they will charge you interest until you have paid it back.
|
4 |
BorrowingMeans by which companies obtain outside financing, i.e., raise funds from outside sources in order to carry on their business.
|
5 |
BorrowingTaking money with a promise to repay the money in the future.
|
6 |
Borrowing(n) the appropriation (of ideas or words etc) from another source(n) obtaining funds from a lender
|
7 |
BorrowingThe act of adopting some aspect of one language into another. It may be lexical (the most obvious and common type of borrowing) but also syntactic, morphological or phonological. The latter types of b [..]
|
8 |
BorrowingSee gearing. Bottom-up stock selection
|
9 |
BorrowingTaking extra cards from one’s own previous melds to form new sets. (Rummy, Gin Rummy, Panguingue)
|
10 |
BorrowingTaking extra cards from ones previous melds to form new sets. (Panguingue)
|
11 |
BorrowingBorrowing is the act of accepting an asset (usually money) from an individual or organisation under a contract requiring its return normally with an associated interest charge.
|
12 |
BorrowingIncurring an obligation to repay a debt in order to invest or consume more than one currently owns.
|
<< Boat journey | Connectedness >> |