Similar words: bowed, cowed, crowed, avowed, widowed, hallowed, endowed, borrowed. Meaning: [əʊ] adj. 1. owed and payable immediately or on demand 2. owed as a debt.
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91. Such liabilities may include repayment of inter-company loans owed to the vendor company.
92. Bill Clinton's two election victories in 1992 and 1996 owed everything to women voters.
93. Imagine if only 13 percent of the adults who are owed tax refunds this year got them.
94. The bulk of September's settlement was a cut in the money owed to credit card firms.
95. Over time she gradually created a Cabinet whose members owed their promotion to her.
96. Any excess money collected above the amount owed the bank must be returned to the borrower.
97. He had every intention of getting the hell out of Paris just as soon as he had collected all the money owed to him.
98. He had, now, friends in many places, or people who owed him a favour.
99. Between the world wars major unions suffered the searing experience of high unemployment which owed much to incompetent employers and benighted policy-makers.
100. I also owed Maggie the courtesy of letting her know I didn't need her to do my legwork any longer.
101. A former landlord said she was still owed several thousand dollars in back rent.
101. Sentencedict.com is a sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.
102. The election of Keir Hardie in 1892 owed more to historical contingency than to a heightened class consciousness among the electorate.
103. Tubeworkers, the largest of the sub-contractors, is taking High Court action over money it claims is owed by Trafalgar.
104. His claim for the trust can no longer be offset against that debt, since it is not owed.
105. But he would be the first to admit he owed most of his success to his wife Renee.
106. It is said that the final preparations owed their antibacterial activity to the phenol which they contained as a preservative.
107. Years later, she acknowledged the debt she owed him for those early lessons in self-determination.
108. His action would be determined by whether a duty was owed.
109. Altogether £1m is missing from the pension fund and a further £1m is owed to creditors.
110. In the past they had a degree of self-doubt because many realized that they owed their position to factors other than merit.
111. Eliot at once sent him a cablegram, saying that he was one to whom all contemporary poets owed a debt.
112. He knew that Keith was a bully, occasionally maltreated his wife, and owed Dempster Lumsden a considerable amount of money.
113. At the same time I felt I was owed an explanation.
114. Third, the duty is owed to institutions which may have authority but only towards other people.
115. The Portland, Ore., skiwear supplier to Whole Earth is owed $ 130, 088.
116. Assume that a duty of care is owed by A to C as a rescue was reasonably foreseeable in the circumstances.
117. Whereas all the Republican members owed him a lot before, he owes them a lot now.
118. I would argue that virtually every successful electric guitar since 1958 has owed something to one or more of the above-mentioned instruments.
119. By contrast a municipal corporation was a public governmental authority with administrative duties owed to all the inhabitants of its area.
120. He had betrayed her, taken another woman to their marriage bed and Eline no longer owed him any loyalty.
More similar words: bowed, cowed, crowed, avowed, widowed, hallowed, endowed, borrowed, narrowed, furrowed, bestowed, mellowed, swallowed, wed, awed, wedge, flawed, wedged, renewed, skewed, outlawed, wedding, newlywed, wedlock, screwed, wednesday, wedding gown, home-brewed, out of wedlock, ash wednesday.