Synonym: adoption. Similar words: sorrowing, narrowing, harrowing, borrow, borrower, borrowed, borrow trouble, borrowed plumes. Meaning: ['bɒrəʊɪŋ] n. 1. the appropriation (of ideas or words etc) from another source 2. obtaining funds from a lender.
Random good picture Not show
121, Philip Hanson's empirical work on international technology transfer laid bare the limitations of borrowing as a survival strategy.
122, These early Acts stemmed very largely from sanitary powers, and did not provide any financial assistance beyond powers of borrowing money.
123, Because borrowing has become easier, and because confidence has been high, personal savings have been falling around the developed world.
124, This link also influences accounting for capital expenditure that is financed other than by borrowing.
125, Lower rates for banks usually mean reduced borrowing costs for businesses.
126, All strikers had to resort to some extent to borrowing, credit, casual work and other ways and means of managing.
127, First, they provide financing of accounts receivable for borrowing firms.
128, The Library is used extensively by S6 pupils and is available to all pupils and Staff for reference and borrowing.
129, Today,(sentencedict.com/borrowing.html) the government wishes to control local borrowing as part of the attempt to limit the total of public spending.
130, In addition, some subsidy programs help to raise interest rates and thus increase borrowing costs for traditional public activities.
131, Nevertheless, obsession with the size of public sector borrowing requirements began at this time.
132, Whenever the government runs a budget deficit, it will have to finance that deficit by borrowing.
133, Rising incomes have led both to an increase in wealth and an increase in borrowing.
134, Discount houses have borrowing facilities at the Bank, with limits related to the capital base of each discount house.
135, However, when demand in the economy is weak, public borrowing will tend to rise.
136, Holzner however describes the cognitive processes of the individual, borrowing both from cognitive psychology and from the phenomenology of Merleau-Ponty.
137, Almost all of the remaining capital required to make up the £1551 millions invested came from borrowing.
138, Interest rates would then rise as the central bank increased its discount rate to discourage borrowing and the demands for legal tender.
139, As far as styling goes Lakewood are obviously borrowing heavily from the Martin heritage, since in outline these are millimetre-perfect dreadnought copies.
140, So in real terms, their attempt to buy off inflation through borrowing makes them poorer than they would otherwise have been.
141, The Chancellor revealed yesterday that public borrowing has ballooned to £37 billion, and is growing fast.
142, We shall pay for the borrowing by borrowing - that is the normal way in which one pays for it.
143, Changes in the level of interest rates charged on borrowing, therefore, depend almost wholly upon movements in the base rate.
144, All methods of borrowing open to individuals may be used by a company with the additional method of issuing a debenture.
145, We must now turn to examine the pattern of taxation upon which the success of public borrowing depended.
146, For the show, the museum is borrowing twenty paintings that complement its own collection.
147, Control of spending was crucial to the government's strategy because it wanted to cut governmental borrowing and taxes.
148, Payment will only be resumed once the group returns to greater profitability and cuts its bank borrowing significantly.
149, As a result Government borrowing is soaring - to £37 billion this year, and £44 billion next year.
150, Given that borrowed funds can always be placed on deposit the spread could be regarded as the real cost of borrowing.
More similar words: sorrowing, narrowing, harrowing, borrow, borrower, borrowed, borrow trouble, borrowed plumes, rowing, growing, crowing, throwing, rowing boat, sorrow, morrow, throw in, tomorrow, sorrowful, corroborate, winnowing, corroborated, corroboration, corroborative, sorrowfully, owing, mowing, showing, bowing, knowing, the day after tomorrow.