Borrow
in sentence
809 examples of Borrow in a sentence
It is to,
borrow
a word from another review, very "Talky".
bottom line, don't waste your money in the theater, or at the video store...wait till one of your friends buys it at the 99 Cent Store...and
borrow
it.
Where he decides to knock off someone that's dressed up as Uncle Sam and
borrow
the costume.
Collect a few puppets and add some household gadget to the interior of your car, don't forget your motorcycle helmet or maybe you can
borrow
it from a policeman or construction worker.
This movie successfully recreated the feel of the game, and because it kept exposition to a minimum of what you needed to know for this particular story and didn't
borrow
from or revise any of the original characters or settings, it supported and strengthened the franchise.
And both Deathtrap and Sleuth
borrow
Heavily from Diabolique.
This movie is so bad (and in a totally unwatchable way) that I won't let any of my horror trash loving friends
borrow
it.
I'd given an older kid 50p to
borrow
his copy of Texas Chain Saw Massacre.
Oversubscribed by 24 times, the issue will allow Zambia to
borrow
more cheaply than many European countries can.
The courts themselves cannot
borrow.
So far, the answer has been to borrow, leading to today’s massive debt overhangs in advanced economies.
In both good times and bad, their refrain is, “We need lower capital requirements,” meaning they should be allowed to
borrow
more.
Loan buy-downs can help keep the education sector “competitive,” and could prove to be a mechanism to leverage extra resources for education, for which capital-strapped countries may not be willing to
borrow
otherwise.
The third most serious problem is to put the US government’s General Fund budget on a sustainable basis, so that the non-Social Security government can finance itself and meet its commitments after the date – around 2020 – when it can no longer
borrow
from the Social Security Trust Fund.
But when businesses and consumers try to borrow, they find that it is very costly, if not impossible.
In a recent speech in Chicago, Irish President Michael D. Higgins explained how private debt became sovereign debt: “As a consequence of the need to
borrow
so as to finance current expenditure and, above all, as a result of the blanket guarantee extended to the main Irish banks’ assets and liabilities, Ireland’s general government debt increased from 25% of GDP in 2007 to 124% in 2013.”
As a result, these countries are confronted with an untenable choice: either stop sending children to school, or
borrow
money at much higher rates and risk accruing unsustainable debts.
Alternatively, they can
borrow
from the natural world a strategy called isomorphic mimicry: just as non-poisonous snakes evolve to resemble a poisonous species, organizations can make themselves look like institutions in other places that are perceived as legitimate.
Not only will those loans’ price fall if only a few entities have the spare funds to buy them, but other distressed entities’ scramble to
borrow
also will make it hard for any institution without funds to obtain them.
The Yale University economist Robert Shiller has long argued that national governments should issue GDP-linked bonds as a safer way to borrow, but convincing them has been difficult.
Assuming individual governments would not want to spend, the eurozone as an entity could
borrow
to finance growth-enhancing policies.
People who disagree with them are said to favor “austerity” at a time when hyper-low interest rates mean that governments can
borrow
for almost nothing.
This kind of crisis cannot be solved simply by ensuring that solvent borrowers can borrow, because the problem is that banks aren’t solvent at prevailing interest rates.
Companies
borrow
a lot to start up, accumulate large fixed costs, and offer such low prices at first that they lose money.
The US also began to
borrow
freely from China’s vast reservoir of surplus saving – a convenient solution for the world’s largest deficit saver.
James Madison, who would become the Constitution’s principal author, couldn’t
borrow
to buy land in frontier Virginia, because lenders lacked confidence that Virginia courts could enforce repayment.
The Constitution would create a new national government that could coin stable money, borrow, and repay debts, including the states’ defaulted Revolutionary War borrowings.
By exploiting a record credit bubble to
borrow
against an unprecedented property bubble, American consumers spent well beyond their means for many years.
While Argentina and Turkey are noteworthy exceptions, most major emerging-market economies have been liberated from the “original sin” of issuing dollar-denominated debt, and thus can
borrow
in their own currency.
Rising asset prices lead to a general increase in purchasing power, because many asset holders are willing (and able) to
borrow
more.
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