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21 Public Sector Borrowing Requirement
Big English-French dictionary > Public Sector Borrowing Requirement
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22 distress borrowing
[Banque] emprunt de détresseEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > distress borrowing
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23 external borrowing
Fin. emprunt extérieurEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > external borrowing
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24 Public Sector Borrowing Requirements
besoins de financement/d'emprunt du secteur publicEnglish-French dictionary of law, politics, economics & finance > Public Sector Borrowing Requirements
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25 fixed-rate borrowing
emprunts m pl à taux fixe -
26 public sector borrowing requirement
= besoins d'emprunt du secteur public non couverts par les rentrées fiscalesEnglish-French business dictionary > public sector borrowing requirement
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27 cost of borrowing
frais d'emprunt (JD) -
28 cost, of, borrowing
coût m d'emprunt, frais m d'emprunt -
29 long-term, borrowing
emprunts m à long terme -
30 temporary, borrowing
emprunt m à court terme -
31 pledge
[ple‹] 1. noun1) (a promise: He gave me his pledge.) promesse, parole2) (something given by a person who is borrowing money etc to the person he has borrowed it from, to be kept until the money etc is returned: He borrowed $20 and left his watch as a pledge.) gage3) (a sign or token: They exchanged rings as a pledge of their love.) gage2. verb1) (to promise: He pledged his support.) promettre2) (to give to someone when borrowing money etc: to pledge one's watch.) mettre en gage -
32 crib
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33 expansion
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34 government
government [ˈgʌvənmənt]1. noun2. adjective[policy, decision, intervention, spending] du gouvernement ; [grant] d'État ; [responsibility, loan] de l'État━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✎ gouvernement has ou instead of o and an extra e in the middle.* * *['gʌvənmənt] 1.1) ( system) ( political) gouvernement m; ( administrative) administration f2.parliamentary government — régime m parlementaire
noun modifier [ minister, official, plan, intervention] du gouvernement; [ decree, department, majority, policy, publication] gouvernemental; [ expenditure, borrowing] de l'État; [ loan, funds] public/-ique -
35 habit
habit [ˈhæbɪt]1. nouna. habitude f• you can do it this time, but don't make a habit of it d'accord pour cette fois, mais il ne faut pas que cela devienne une habitude• to get into/out of the habit of doing sth prendre/perdre l'habitude de faire qchb. to have a habit [drug user] être dépendantc. ( = robe) habit m2. compounds* * *['hæbɪt]1) ( custom) gen habitude fto have a habit of doing —
to get into/out of the habit of doing something — prendre/perdre l'habitude de faire quelque chose
2) ( addiction) accoutumance fto kick the habit — (colloq) ( of addiction) décrocher (colloq); ( of smoking) arrêter
3) Religion habit m4) ( for horseriding) tenue f d'équitation -
36 import
1. noun━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✦ Lorsque import est un nom, l'accent tombe sur la première syllabe: ˈɪmpɔ:t, lorsque c'est un verbe, sur la seconde: ɪmˈpɔ:t.* * *1. ['ɪmpɔːt]1) Commerce, Economics importation f2) ( cultural borrowing) apport m ( from à)4) sout ( importance) importance f2. [ɪm'pɔːt]transitive verb importer ( from de; to en) -
37 loan
loan [ləʊn]1. noun• can I ask you for a loan? pouvez-vous m'accorder un prêt ?► on loan• my assistant is on loan to another department at the moment mon assistant est détaché dans un autre service en ce moment3. compounds* * *[ləʊn] 1.2.to be on loan — [museum object] être prêté (to à)
transitive verb prêter (also loan out) prêter [object, money] -
38 owe
owe [əʊ]• he owes me $5 il me doit 5 dollars• to what do I owe the honour of...? qu'est-ce qui me vaut l'honneur de... ?• I owe my family my grateful thanks for their understanding je suis profondément reconnaissant à ma famille de sa compréhension* * *[əʊ]transitive verb1) ( be indebted for) devoir [money, invention, life, success]to owe something to somebody — devoir quelque chose à quelqu'un [failure, artistic style, money]
can I owe it to you? — ( borrowing money) est-ce que je peux te le rendre plus tard?
my mother, to whom I owe so much — ma mère, à qui je dois tant
I owe you one (colloq) ou a favour — je te revaudrai ça
he owes me one — (colloq) il me doit bien ça
2) ( be morally bound to give) devoir [duty, loyalty, explanation] -
39 PSBR
British ECONOMICS ( abbreviation public sector borrowing requirement) = besoins d'emprunt du secteur public non couverts par les rentrées fiscales -
40 fixed-rate
FINANCE (loan, mortgage) à taux fixefixed-rate assessment system régime m du forfait;fixed-rate bond obligation f à revenu fixe;fixed-rate borrowing emprunts m pl à taux fixe;fixed-rate financing financement m à taux fixe;fixed-rate investment investissement m à revenu fixe;fixed-rate rebate abattement m forfaitaire;fixed-rate securities titres m pl à revenu fixe
См. также в других словарях:
borrowing — the process by which money is received subject to a condition for repayment, either on demand or at some ascertainable future time. Collins dictionary of law. W. J. Stewart. 2001 … Law dictionary
borrowing — [bor′rowiŋ] n. LOANWORD … English World dictionary
borrowing — A futures trade on the LME involving the buying of near dated contracts and the selling of long dated contracts. An example of a carry ( carrying). The equivalent of an intramarket spread trade sometimes known as buying the spread . Dresdner… … Financial and business terms
borrowing — [[t]bɒ̱roʊɪŋ[/t]] borrowings 1) N UNCOUNT: also N in pl Borrowing is the activity of borrowing money. We have allowed spending and borrowing to rise in this recession. ...the huge ₤50 billion public sector borrowing requirement. 2) N COUNT A… … English dictionary
borrowing */ — UK [ˈbɒrəʊɪŋ] / US [ˈbɔroʊɪŋ] noun Word forms borrowing : singular borrowing plural borrowings 1) a) [uncountable] the practice of borrowing money The cost of borrowing has risen again. b) borrowings [plural] money owed by a business, country, or … English dictionary
borrowing — n. a borrowing from (a borrowing from French) * * * [ bɒrəʊɪŋ] a borrowing from (a borrowing from French) … Combinatory dictionary
Borrowing — (Roget s Thesaurus) < N PARAG:Borrowing >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 borrowing borrowing pledging GRP: N 2 Sgm: N 2 borrowed plumes borrowed plumes Sgm: N 2 plagiarism plagiarism &c.(thieving) 791 GRP: N 3 Sgm: N 3 replevin … English dictionary for students
borrowing — bor|row|ing [ bɔrouıŋ ] noun * 1. ) uncount the practice of borrowing money: The cost of borrowing has risen again. a ) borrowings plural money owed by a business, country, or organization: an Internet start up with borrowings of over $10 million … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
borrowing — / bɒrəυɪŋ/ noun the action of borrowing money ● The new factory was financed by bank borrowing. ▪▪▪ ‘…we tend to think of building societies as having the best borrowing rates and indeed many do offer excellent terms’ [Financial Times] … Dictionary of banking and finance
borrowing — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Obtaining temporary possession of Nouns 1. borrowing; mortgaging, financing, raising money; pawning, pledging, hypothecation. Slang, hitting up. See acquisition. 2. appropriation, use, taking, adoption;… … English dictionary for students
borrowing — bor|row|ing [ˈbɔrəuıŋ US ˈba:rou , ˈbo: ] n 1.) [U and C] when a person, government, company etc borrows money, or the money that they borrow ▪ Public borrowing has to be increased. 2.) something such as a word, phrase, or idea that has been… … Dictionary of contemporary English