Sentences with phrase «borrowing terms»

As your business credit score increases, you will get better borrowing terms on your best small business credit card.
They are small, personal loans that come with a short borrowing term.
Find out which lenders offer personal loans with the longest borrowing terms - best for a major purchase or consolidating a large amount of debt.
Behind Door # 1, public corporations with record high debt loads will be rolling over obligations and «refinancing» them at higher borrowing terms.
While this page presents the most common home equity loan and HELOC terms, other borrowing terms can also be important.
Moreover, the benefits of central bank interventions are becoming progressively smaller and short - lived (nearly log - periodic in fact, to borrow a term from crash dynamics).
Unless you have a cash reserve, you will have to shop around for the best borrowing terms.
EMI in borrowing terms stands for equated monthly installment, which is the set payment that you must make every month over the term of the loan.
Whitehead borrowed a term from aesthetics to explain what is needed: «contrasts».
Borrowing the term for a compound that boosts the effect of a neurotransmitter, he speculates that peyote serves as a «humility agonist,» counteracting his arrogance by instilling awe and reverence in him.
However, I'd also argue that intentional debasing (to borrow the term as if it were linked to a metal) of a currency is effectively defaulting on an obligation, even though the debt is technically being repaid.
Market optimists look forward to a Goldilocks period with gradual rate hikes and low defaults shaping borrowing terms that suit both lender and debtor.
However, in most cases the amortization period changes because different borrowing terms, interest rates and payments against the principal amount at each renewal vary the length of time required to pay off the mortgage.
At some point (as it happens in Christian circles) a well - intentioned person borrowed this term and voila, Jesus became the new face of a hustler — except the pure and perfected version: «Eat.
It is likely that the New Testament writers borrowed the term from the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Old Testament) where the people of Israel are often referred to as the ekklēsia of God.
Perhaps, borrowing a term Farron used to describe the Liberal Democrats in an interview with The House Magazine, delegates need to develop a bit more of the cockroach about them if they are going to last the course.
The American groups rallying against both the plant and the people they distrusted borrowed a term — marihuana — that came to prominence first in Mexico.
He entitled it «The Coming Technological Singularity,» borrowing a term astrophysicists use to describe a place where the ordinary rules of gravity and other forces break down.
They called this material dark matter, borrowing a term first used by Swiss astronomer Fritz Zwicky in the 1930s.
The 2000s introduced us to the «skin jobs» of Battlestar Galactica, which borrowed that term from the 1982 film and ran with it in ways that 2049 seems like it might be contemplating taking on two or three Blade Runner sequels down the line.
But the excitement is just that, momentary and very fleeting — proving that without a story or characters to really care about, an action thriller is, to borrow the term Gabriel uses in the film, just a silly little reindeer game.
The ECOA applies not just when credit is denied, but also if a consumer receives less favorable borrowing terms such as a higher interest rate.
Catching the Wave The investment industry borrowed the term «momentum» from the physical sciences.
Borrowing terms about investing works for miles because miles are an investment of sorts.
The exhibition's title Movement and Complication borrows terms from horology.
In 1954, French literary critic Michel Carrouges borrowed the term bachelor machine from this work to name a pervasive trend in turn - of - the - century art and literature, citing the work of Mary Shelley, Edgar Allen Poe, Jules Verne, Alfred Jarry, Villiers de l'Isle - Adam, Raymond Roussel, Franz Kafka, Fritz Lang, Thea Von Harbou, and Jean Tinguely, among others.
A dithyramb in classical mythology is a wild choral hymn dedicated to Dionysus, and Lüpertz borrows the term from Nietzsche.
Steven Jay Gould borrowed the term «just so stories» from Rudyard Kipling to describe the presentation of entirely unfounded assertions as scientific fact.
Borrowing a term attributed to Citigroup, this growing practice is being called «hourglass» marketing.
Correcting errors on your credit report can be a slow process, but it could help you get financed down the road with more flexible options and better borrowing terms.
GetMeThere's algorithm matches my commute with people going in the same direction, so they're getting paid to do what they were going to do anyway, so it's a win - win - win (borrowing a term from Michael Scott).
Feel free to borrow that term or send me ideas on a better name.
That means VantageScore 4.0 can help lenders offer fair, appropriate loan amounts and borrowing terms to the vast majority of consumers who have credit files
I think there is, and I will call it, borrowing the term from Aristotle, the Way of Aporia.
Globalization paradigm has invariably brought a political system - borrowing a term from Prof. Rajni Kothari «dictatorship of money».
It therefore seems strained at best to speak of most classrooms as communities; perhaps they are best described, to borrow a term from Erving Goffman, as «focused gatherings.»
So cupcake mixology: I'm borrowing this term from A Beautiful Mess and applying it to this mess beauty of a technique.
To borrow a term from winemaking, Kate takes a low - intervention approach to egg - and - dairy - free desserts at the Philadelphia restaurant group she runs with her husband, chef Rich Landau, and in the couple's two cookbooks, Vedge and V Street.
To borrow a term that has been used frequently by the High Court of Australia in determining the constitutionality of legislation, what is needed are criteria that are «appropriate and adapted» [10] to reducing children's exposure to food advertising, or to moderating the impact of food advertising on children's food preferences.
For example, if Bayern Munich suffered an «injury crisis», to borrow a term from the lexicon of the footballing world, then they would arguably still have cover in the form of David Alaba who became schooled in various positions due to his multi-functional nature.
I'll be posting more about hormonal sleep windows next week and I might have to borrow that term!
«Whatever the reason you get the sense that New York is no longer a state that is leaning in, if I may borrow the term,» Astorino said.
During the course of the bribery scheme, Percoco and Howe allegedly referred to bribe money to be paid to Percoco's wife as ziti, borrowing a term from «The Sopranos,» Bharara said.
The focus on «new faces» was an attempt to overcome the powerful influence of «cumulative advantage» on popularity, Ciampaglia added, borrowing a term from the social sciences in which the greatest predictor of future success is past success.
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