-
1 insurance
[ɪn'ʃuərəns]nfire/life insurance — ubezpieczenie na wypadek pożaru/na życie
* * *noun (the promise of a sum of money in event of loss eg by fire or other disaster, given in compensation by a company etc in return for regular payments: Have you paid the insurance on your jewellery?; ( also adjective) insurance companies.) ubezpieczenie -
2 policy
['pɔlɪsɪ]polityka f; (also: insurance policy) polisa f ubezpieczeniowa* * *I ['poləsi] plural - policies; noun(a planned or agreed course of action usually based on particular principles: the government's policies on education.) politykaII ['poləsi] plural - policies; noun(a (written) agreement with an insurance company: an insurance policy.) polisa
См. также в других словарях:
take out (something) — 1. to obtain an agreement to borrow money or financially protect your property. If you buy a house, you must take out fire insurance to protect you from loss. He took a loan out to buy the car. 2. to attack and destroy something. The army took… … New idioms dictionary
take out — verb 1. cause to leave (Freq. 7) The teacher took the children out of the classroom • Syn: ↑move out, ↑remove • Hyponyms: ↑clear, ↑call in, ↑estrange … Useful english dictionary
take out — phrasal verb [transitive] Word forms take out : present tense I/you/we/they take out he/she/it takes out present participle taking out past tense took out past participle taken out 1) to remove something from a pocket, bag etc Henry took out his… … English dictionary
take out — /ˌteɪk aυt/ verb 1. to remove something ● She’s taken all the money out of her account. 2. ♦ to take out a patent for an invention to apply for and receive a patent ♦ to take out insurance against theft to pay a premium to an insurance company,… … Dictionary of banking and finance
take out — 1) PHRASAL VERB If you take something out, you remove it permanently from its place. [V n P] I got an abscess so he took the tooth out... [V P n (not pron)] When you edit the tape you can take out the giggles. 2) PHRASAL VERB If you take out… … English dictionary
take out — verb Date: 13th century transitive verb 1. a. (1) deduct, separate (2) exclude, omit (3) withdraw, withhold b. to find release for ; vent … New Collegiate Dictionary
Take-Out Commitment — A specific type of mortgage purchase agreement. Under a take out commitment, a long term investor agrees to buy a mortgage from a mortgage banker at a specific date in the future. Take out commitments are enforced once a project reaches a… … Investment dictionary
Take-Out Lender — A type of financial institution that provides a long term mortgage on property. This mortgage will replace interim financing, such as a construction loan. Take out lenders are normally large financial conglomerates, such as insurance or… … Investment dictionary
take out — phr verb Take out is used with these nouns as the object: ↑account, ↑ad, ↑advert, ↑advertisement, ↑appendix, ↑boat, ↑book, ↑cellphone, ↑clause, ↑contact lens, ↑contract, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
insurance — /in shoor euhns, sherr /, n. 1. the act, system, or business of insuring property, life, one s person, etc., against loss or harm arising in specified contingencies, as fire, accident, death, disablement, or the like, in consideration of a… … Universalium
insurance — Guarding against property loss or damage making payments in the form of premiums to an insurance company, which pays an agreed upon sum to the insured in the event of loss. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * insurance in‧sur‧ance [ɪnˈʆʊərəns ǁ… … Financial and business terms