Loan
41Loan — The Mosaic law required that when an Israelite needed to borrow, what he asked was to be freely lent to him, and no interest was to be charged, although interest might be taken of a foreigner (Ex. 22:25; Deut. 23:19, 20; Lev. 25:35 38). At the …
42loan — See lend. See lend, loan …
43Loan — This name, with variant spellings Loan, Lane, Lain, Layne etc., has three distinct possible origins, the first and most likely being an English topographical name for one resident in a narrow pathway between fences or hedges, later used of any… …
44loan — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. lending, borrowing; advance, credit, touch (sl.); sinking fund; mortgage. v., informal, give or extend credit; underwrite, finance. See debt, means. loan shark II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. accommodation,… …
45loan — [13] Old English had a noun lǣn, a close relative of the verb lǣnan (precursor of modern English lend). It meant ‘gift’, but it died out before the Middle English period, and was replaced by the related Old Norse lán, which has become modern… …
46loan n — A bank manager without anyone around may find themself a loan. lonely adj …
47loan — n 1. lending, advancing, loaning, money lending; usury, Sl. loan sharking, Sl. shylocking. 2. advance, allowance, accomodation; credit; (in World War II) lend lease. v 3. lend, advance, allow, credit, accommodate, Sl. push; (in World War II) lend …
48loan — paskola statusas Aprobuotas sritis Finansai apibrėžtis Lėšų skolinimosi arba skolinimo priemonė, kai paskolos sutartimi viena šalis (paskolos davėjas) perduoda kitos šalies (paskolos gavėjo) nuosavybėn pinigus, o paskolos gavėjas įsipareigoja… …
49loan — skolinimas statusas T sritis Gynyba apibrėžtis Susitarimas, kuriuo trečiajai šaliai leidžiama naudoti turtą už atlygį arba be jo neperduodant to turto nuosavybės teisių. atitikmenys: angl. loan šaltinis NATO mokymų ir pratybų finansavimo terminų… …
50loan — [13] Old English had a noun lǣn, a close relative of the verb lǣnan (precursor of modern English lend). It meant ‘gift’, but it died out before the Middle English period, and was replaced by the related Old Norse lán, which has become modern… …