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Example sentences for "loans"

Lexicographically close words:
loamy; loan; loanable; loaned; loaning; loant; loath; loathe; loathed; loathes
  1. The enactment by Congress of a national banking law has proved a valuable support of the public credit, and the general legislation in relation to loans has fully answered the expectations of its favorers.

  2. All these privileges and exemptions were matters of negociation between the borough and the king or the lord of the manor to be bought for money, or for political support, or for loans in time of need.

  3. If a corporation was in need of money it could always fall back on loans from rich townsmen, who were willing to lend even on long credit.

  4. But when Edward declared himself unable to pay his debts and repudiated the whole of the Florentine loans ruin fell on the city; its trade was paralyzed, and commercial disasters ended in political revolution.

  5. Loans from the towns seem to have been voluntary.

  6. All this time matters were made easier for the townspeople by constant talk of loans to the King.

  7. In Lynn the loans to the corporation were on a very great scale according to the ideas of the time, and the municipal debt, entirely raised on the spot, was as permanent and as progressive as that of a modern town.

  8. Merchants paid money down for the protection and favour of the king in reiterated loans or gifts, whether free or forced.

  9. He made monopolies in his own favour of all the necessaries of life, and secured his ill-gotten gains by ready loans of part of it to Justinian.

  10. Last year, when the succor arrived there was nothing owing for loans or food.

  11. Consequently, I find myself owing, in loans and debts contracted in this year, to the amount of one hundred and fifty thousand pesos.

  12. Hitherto the queen had been accustomed through Gresham, her factor, to raise what money she required by loans from merchants abroad.

  13. The policy of allowing persons who are elected for three years to raise loans and plunge a district into debt for a period of thirty years without one iota of personal responsibility is obviously dangerous.

  14. The central ideas of modern municipalism are the raising of loans and the sweating of the ratepayer.

  15. Our Company will guarantee any of these loans a 7 per cent.

  16. Their charter is perpetual, so the care of the loans will not be thrown upon the investor, as it would be in case of the death, change of business or location of an individual or firm negotiating the same.

  17. Investments, in the form of loans to residents, made by a resident agent of a nonresident creditor, are taxable to the nonresident creditor.

  18. Most loans were made in times of distress.

  19. But the system of loans will probably help to develop greater thrift in the younger farming population.

  20. Ordinarily these loans can and are renewed without difficulty or are replaced by others, based on the security of new business transactions in unbroken succession.

  21. Such loans as fall due can generally be renewed for long periods at rates little higher than usual, the market for long-time and short-time loans being in large measure independent of each other.

  22. The proceeds from loans (and certain other items of sales) are called nonrevenue receipts, because they are but in anticipation of receipts from other sources.

  23. Most of the long-time loans do not fall due in such seasons of stress, and the great mass of slowly exchanging wealth alters little and slowly in price.

  24. They are expected to give to loans that are made on the security of farms as wide a market and as high credit as state and municipal bonds now have.

  25. The worst of the evils of crises are confined to the markets where the greatest numbers of short-time loans are made.

  26. They bid fair to bring the rate of interest on long-time loans to farmers down to 5 per cent or less in the remotest parts of the land.

  27. Such adjustments serve to some extent to neutralize the effects of changes in the standard of deferred payments so far as concerns new loans made in view of just such a change and in expectation of its continuance.

  28. National banks were (until 1913) forbidden to make loans on real estate, and this greatly "restricted their power to serve farmers and other borrowers in rural communities.

  29. Other questions touching the management of these loans were so clearly and frankly explained that nothing but the captiousness of party could refuse to be satisfied.

  30. The loans and their purposes were kept entirely distinct in the accounts of the department.

  31. So he had added new and still richer costumes to her wardrobe, and assisted their attractions with costly jewelry-loans on the future land sale.

  32. The moral of which is, that when one loans money to start a bank with, one ought to take the party's written acknowledgment of the fact.

  33. Again, in 1904, during the Russo-Japanese War, Japanese loans were raised in London and Berlin, and Russian loans in Paris and Berlin.

  34. In contradistinction to the theory of International Law, the practice of the States has beyond doubt established the fact that neutrals need not prevent on their territory subscription to loans for belligerents.

  35. The distinction between loans and subsidies is certainly correct as the law stands at present.

  36. But if he were to allow on his territory a public appeal for subscriptions to such subsidy, he would certainly violate his duty of impartiality; for loans are a matter of commerce, subsidies are not.

  37. Several writers[696] maintained either that a neutral was obliged to prevent such loans and subsidies altogether, or at least that he must prohibit a public subscription on neutral territory for such loans and subsidies.

  38. Sidenote: Loans and Subsidies on the part of Subjects of Neutrals.

  39. Loans and Subsidies on the part of Subjects of Neutrals 430 VII.

  40. Sidenote: Loans and Subsidies on the part of Neutrals.

  41. He has negotiated many important realty transfers, has placed many loans and has written a large amount of insurance, so that his business has reached a most gratifying figure.

  42. Both notes were written on common white paper, and were purchased by the bank of a certain broker at a time when it was difficult to make loans by discount in the usual manner.

  43. The accounts of these loans are kept by the mahajuns, who, aware of the deep ignorance of their clients, falsify their books, without fear of detection.

  44. Benedict at Lincoln was a society of traders or merchants, who traded on loans from the common fund, paying back half of the increase they made on it.

  45. The second represented the theories of Hamilton and the Federalists, and favored a bank with a reasonable capital, specie-paying, and free to decide about making loans to the government.

  46. The vote was then reconsidered, the bill recommitted and brought back, with a reduced capital, and freed from the government power to force loans and suspend specie payments.

  47. The impairment of credit has already been partly set forth in presenting the difficulty of making loans for improvement purposes, and noting the higher rate that must be paid.

  48. They must also be permitted to earn enough to assure capital that they can pay interest and principal of the heavy additional loans asked.

  49. Of some, loans were required: to others, the way of benevolence was proposed: methods supported by precedent, but always invidious even in times more submissive and compliant.

  50. Loans were by privy seal required of several: to others the way of benevolence was proposed; methods supported by precedents, condemned by positive laws, and always invidious even to times more submissive and compliant.

  51. Its ways and means consisted in loans and taxes, and to these it resorted.


  52. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "loans" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.