n
Money borrowed from someone else; debt.
n
(finance) A mortgage loan which is taken out by a fictitious buyer or for a fictitious property, or both.
adj
(US, finance) Alternative-A — Describing mortgages loans that do not conform to the traditional standards of Fannie Mae, but are presented as having an "A" credit rating, based on the borrower's FICO credit score.
n
(chiefly southern US, idiomatic, dated, law, finance) A loan arrangement in which all of the money borrowed from a lender, for whatever purpose, is secured by one's home, land, and other property.
n
(countable) A loan taken for the purpose of purchasing an automobile.
n
(law) A piece of paper containing a recognizance or bail bond.
n
(insurance) A banking and insurance structure in which insurance is sold through the bank or the bank's distribution channels.
n
(obsolete) Pledge; security.
n
(law) The right of a bank to satisfy a customer's matured debt by seizing the customer's money or property within the bank's possession.
n
One who possesses a cheque, bond, or other notes promising payment.
n
(law) A lien that gives the lienholder the entitlement to take possession of any or all of the lienee's real property to cover a delinquent loan.
n
(US) A loan, or mortgage, for multiple subdivisions of a single tract of land.
v
(transitive) To guarantee or secure a financial risk.
n
A cleaning service performed on an empty property in order to fulfill the requirements of a rental bond agreement.
adj
(insurance) suitable for having one's current or future employment insured by a fidelity bond
n
(law) That part of the entire indebtedness of a corporation or state that is represented by bonds it has issued; a debt contracted under the obligation of a bond.
n
The main underwriter or manager in equity, debt, or hybrid securities issuances, who syndicates with other investment banks in order to lower the risk.
v
To take money from a bank under the agreement that the bank will be paid over the course of time.
n
One from whom something is borrowed; a lender.
n
(business, finance) A sum of money loaned or borrowed for a short period of time in order to cover expenses until new expected funds become available.
n
Alternative form of bridge loan [(business, finance) A sum of money loaned or borrowed for a short period of time in order to cover expenses until new expected funds become available.]
n
(Australia, finance, informal) A back-to-back loan.
n
(finance) A loan where the payment of the entire principal of the loan is due at the end of the loan term.
n
(economics) A loan, typically secured by shares, that is repayable on demand
n
(law) A person or company that owes a charge or right of security.
n
(finance) A security or guarantee (usually an asset) pledged for the repayment of a loan if one cannot procure enough funds to repay.
adj
(law) Secured by a pledge of collateral.
n
(Roman law, civil law) A gratuitous loan for the temporary use of a thing to be returned after a fixed or determinable time.
n
A mechanism by which a loan or trade agreement results in the lender or one party receiving less than full market value.
n
(US, finance) A fixed- or adjustable-rate, fully amortized loan secured by a mortgage or deed of trust that is not insured or guaranteed by an agency of the federal government (such as FHA or VA). (Source: Office of Thrift Supervision https://web.archive.org/web/20060618191009/http://www.ots.treas.gov/glossary/gloss-c.html)
n
crowdfunding in the form of a loan that must later be repaid
n
(obsolete) A certificate of a loan made to the government; a government bond.
n
(finance, law) A document evidencing a debt; the debt so evidenced.
n
A nation's use of predatory loans in order to gain leverage in relations with the recipient country or to seize assets within the indebted country.
n
(finance) An owner of a financial obligation of another party.
n
(finance, obsolete) A deposit.
n
(finance) The borrowing of money by a company director from his/her company.
n
(law) The party directed to pay the amount of a draft or cheque.
n
(finance) A type of mortgage (typically a loan to buy a house) where, over the term of the loan, the borrower's regular payments to the lender cover only the interest charged by the lender. At the same time, the borrower makes regular payments into a separate savings or investment plan. When this plan matures, the borrower uses the proceeds to repay the principal of the loan. Contrasted with repayment mortgage.
n
Synonym of endowment mortgage.
n
The situation in which the owner of a sports club or franchise borrows heavily in order to contract and pay its personnel, thereby jeopardising its long-term financial future.
n
(finance) an unvarying charge such as rent or property tax.
n
(finance, informal) The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC), a private, stockholder-owned corporation sponsored by the US government, established in 1968 to provide market competition for the Federal National Mortgage Association.
v
To bind by pledge, or security; to engage.
n
Pawn, obligation as collateral for a loan.
n
(countable) A loan taken for the purpose of purchasing a house, or other type of residential property.
n
the use of property, or an existing mortgage, as security for a loan, etc.
n
(obsolete) One who gives or offers security for another; a surety.
n
A loan of an item between libraries or similar institutions.
n
(neologism) The practice of posting one's house keys back to the mortgage company because of negative equity or inability to pay mortgage investments.
n
The person to whom something is lent.
n
The action of, or an instance of the action of the verb to lend.
n
(finance) An amount of money in a company that is owed to someone and has to be paid in the future, such as tax, debt, interest, and mortgage payments.
n
A mortgage loan for which the borrower made a statement of claimed income and assets which was not verified by the mortgage originator.
n
(informal, derogatory) A stated-income (US) or self-certificated (UK) loan secured by a mortgage granted without the lender verifying information provided by the applicant as to financial or employment status.
n
(taxation) An amount of money collected from an individual or an organization by the government or other entity in order to legitimize an activity.
n
(law) A right to take possession of a debtor’s property as security until a debt or duty is discharged.
n
(law, banking, finance) An act or instance of lending, an act or instance of granting something for temporary use.
n
A compound word or expression serving to reflect a concept otherwise denoted by a loan word or an other term of formally imported elements not necessarily without using such elements but without any elements corresponding to that term perceived as imported.
n
this is the hypernym for loan rendering / loan rendition and loan translation, and optionally also for loan creation (usage varies)
n
Synonym of semantic loan
n
Synonym of loan rendering
n
Someone who lends money at exorbitant rates of interest.
n
A money laundering or tax avoidance scheme in which money is deposited in an offshore bank and then borrowed back by a shell company controlled by the holder of that bank account.
n
A loan from a trust fund to the grantor that created the fund.
n
borrower; someone who is loaned something
n
One who loans; a lender.
n
One who takes out a loan.
n
(Britain) An allowance paid to staff of a national organization working in London to help offset the additional expense of living in the capital.
n
(US, Australia, banking, finance) A loan or mortgage where the borrower provides only limited proof of their income.
n
interest at any rate agreed on for money lent upon respondentia and bottomry bonds
n
A loan secured by bottomry or respondentia bonds.
n
(countable, finance, insurance) The state of a debt obligation at the end of the term of maturation thereof, once all interest and any applicable fees have accrued to the principal.
n
A person who borrows a microloan.
n
(countable, banking) A microloan.
n
(finance) Finance that is provided to unemployed or low-income people or groups
n
A person or organisation offering microfinance.
n
The provision of microfinance.
n
A person or company in the business of microlending.
n
(banking) Lending of small amounts of money per loan as part of a microcredit program.
n
(banking) A small loan, especially one extended to a poor person as part of a microcredit program of such lending intended to alleviate poverty.
n
A loan for a small amount.
n
The practice of lending money.
n
(law) Abbreviation of mortgage. [(law) A special form of secured loan where the purpose of the loan must be specified to the lender, to purchase assets that must be fixed (not movable) property, such as a house or piece of farm land. The assets are registered as the legal property of the borrower but the lender can seize them and dispose of them if they are not satisfied with the manner in which the repayment of the loan is conducted by the borrower. Once the loan is fully repaid, the lender loses this right of seizure and the assets are then deemed to be unencumbered.]
v
(transitive, law) To borrow against a property, to obtain a loan for another purpose by giving away the right of seizure to the lender over a fixed property such as a house or piece of land; to pledge a property in order to get a loan.
n
(finance) A bond secured by a lien on real estate.
n
(slang, obsolete) A pawnbroker's ticket or duplicate.
n
Any financial institution that obtains its profit by lending mortgages for the purchase of property
adj
(finance) Having mortgages as collateral.
n
(finance) an asset-backed security whose cash flows are backed by the principal and interest payments of a set of mortgage loans.
n
One who provides a loan secured upon the borrowers' property, the lender in a mortgage agreement.
n
One who uses property they own as security for a loan; the borrower in a mortgage agreement.
n
Abbreviation of mortgage. [(law) A special form of secured loan where the purpose of the loan must be specified to the lender, to purchase assets that must be fixed (not movable) property, such as a house or piece of farm land. The assets are registered as the legal property of the borrower but the lender can seize them and dispose of them if they are not satisfied with the manner in which the repayment of the loan is conducted by the borrower. Once the loan is fully repaid, the lender loses this right of seizure and the assets are then deemed to be unencumbered.]
n
(law) One who borrows personal chattels which are to be consumed by him, and which he is to return or repay in kind
n
A contract in which movables are loaned in this way.
n
(finance) A type of loan or loan condition in which the borrower agrees with the lender not to allow any other lender or creditor to rank ahead for payment in the event of a liquidation. Such a loan is unsecured (ie. not backed by a charge over specific assets).
n
A contract in early Ancient Rome in which the debtor pledged his own person as collateral should he default on his loan (thus risking becoming a slave to the creditor).
n
A mortgage loan to a borrower with no income or assets.
n
Alternative spelling of NINJA loan [A subprime loan issued to borrowers with no job, income, or assets.]
n
A loan that is made from something that was borrowed; something that is onloaned.
v
To loan out something that has been borrowed.
n
A loan that is made from something that was borrowed; something that is onloaned.
n
(finance) An income that is made using little to no effort, such as pension income, rent, or interest, as opposed to normal employment.
n
(uncountable) The state of being held as security for a loan, or as a pledge.
n
A small, short-term unsecured loan of money at an extremely high interest rate.
n
(finance) The online lending of money to a person or organization by a group of unrelated people who each commit a relatively small amount.
n
A pool of assets forming an independent legal entity that are bought with the contributions to a pension plan for the exclusive purpose of financing pension plan benefits.
n
A loan (e.g. between museums) for an unspecified period of time.
adj
(of a loan) Such that the lender and borrower are individuals rather than companies.
n
The customer who has purchased a plan, such as a pension or insurance plan.
n
(law) A bailment of personal property to secure payment of a debt without transfer of title.
n
(US) An official document confirming that an applicant for a mortgage has been qualified to borrow a certain amount of money at, or below, a specific interest rate.
adj
Paying rates or taxes.
v
(finance) To pledge hypothecated client-owned securities in a margin account to secure a bank loan; usually used for mortgages.
n
(finance) The pledge of hypothecated client-owned securities in a margin account to secure a bank loan; usually used for mortgages.
n
The sale and subsequent renting of a property, as an alternative to foreclosure
n
(finance) A type of mortgage (typically a loan to buy a house) in which, over the term of the loan, the borrower gradually repays the loan principal, in addition to paying interest, so that at the end of the term the principal is wholly repaid. Contrasted with endowment mortgage.
n
(law, commercial law) A loan upon goods laden on board a ship.
n
(finance) An agreement under which money is borrowed to be repaid only when the borrower sells their home or dies or moves.
n
(business) A mortgage servicing employee who approves a foreclosure without reviewing relevant documents
n
(US, finance, informal) SLM Corporation: a publicly traded corporation dealing with student loans.
n
(finance, business) A loan in which the borrower pledges some asset as collateral for the loan, which then becomes a secured debt owed to the creditor who issues the loan.
n
(finance) Property etc. temporarily relinquished to guarantee repayment of a loan.
n
(law) The right of a lender to take possession of collateral offered to secure the loan.
n
(law, finance) One who services a loan or other obligation, by collecting receivables and carrying out related actions such as enforcement
n
(finance) A loan with a below-market interest rate and sometimes other concessions to the borrower.
n
(finance) A financial instrument that consolidates multiple debts into a single bond.
adj
On which tax has been paid.
n
A loan that must be repaid by a certain time.
n
(finance, business) A type of secured loan where borrowers can use their vehicle title as collateral.
n
(business, finance) A loan made to a parent company by one of its subsidiaries.
n
The length of time permitted for the payment of a bill of exchange.
n
(law, archaic) A pledge or security; bail.
n
(law, historical) A living pledge, which exists where an estate is granted until a debt is paid out of its proceeds.
n
(obsolete, Scotland) The conveyance of land in pledge for a debt; a mortgage.
n
Alternative form of wadset [(obsolete, Scotland) The conveyance of land in pledge for a debt; a mortgage.]
n
Alternative form of wadset [(obsolete, Scotland) The conveyance of land in pledge for a debt; a mortgage.]
n
A kind of mortgage, being a conveyance of an estate, redeemable at any time on payment of the principal, with an understanding that the profits in the meantime shall be received by the mortgagee without account, in satisfaction of interest.
n
A form of mortgage in which the seller of a property extends to the buyer a junior mortgage which exists in addition to any superior mortgages already secured on the property. The seller accepts a secured promissory note from the buyer for the amount due on the underlying mortgage plus an amount up to the remaining purchase-money balance.
n
The amount yielded by the annual income of property; used in expressing the value of a thing in the number of years required for its income to yield its purchase price, in computing the amount to be paid for annuities, etc.
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