BORROW vs TAKE OVER: NOUN
- The act of borrowing.
- A ransom; a pledge or guarantee.
- A surety; someone standing bail.
- Something deposited as security; a pledge; a surety; a hostage.
- Deviation of the path of a rolling ball from a straight line; slope; slant.
- An obsolete form of borough.
- A tithing; a frank-pledge.
- Cost; expense.
- A borrowing; the act of borrowing.
- A pledge or surety; bail; security: applied both to the thing given as security and to the person giving it: as, “with baile nor borrowe,”
- Same as borrow-pit.
- N/A
BORROW vs TAKE OVER: VERB
- To temporarily obtain (something) for (someone).
- To lend.
- In a subtraction, to deduct (one) from a digit of the minuend and add ten to the following digit, in order that the subtraction of a larger digit in the subtrahend from the digit in the minuend to which ten is added gives a positive result.
- To adopt a word from another language.
- To adopt (an idea) as one's own.
- To receive (something) from somebody temporarily, expecting to return it.
- Get temporarily
- Take up and practice as one's own
- To become more successful than someone or something else.
- To annex a territory by conquest or invasion
- To appropriate something without permission
- To buy out the ownership of a business
- To relieve someone temporarily
- To adopt a further responsibility or duty
- To assume control of something, especially by force; to usurp
- Take on titles, offices, duties, responsibilities
- Seize and take control without authority and possibly with force; take as one's right or possession
- Take up and practice as one's own
- Do over
- Take on as one's own the expenses or debts of another person
- Take up, as of debts or payments
- Free someone temporarily from his or her obligations
- Take over ownership of; of corporations and companies
BORROW vs TAKE OVER: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To borrow something.
- To adopt (a word) from one language for use in another.
- In subtraction, to take a unit from the next larger denomination in the minuend so as to make a number larger than the number to be subtracted.
- To adopt or use as one's own.
- To obtain or receive (something) on loan with the promise or understanding of returning it or its equivalent.
- N/A
BORROW vs TAKE OVER: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To copy or imitate; to adopt.
- To receive from another as a loan, with the implied or expressed intention of returning the identical article or its equivalent in kind; -- the opposite of lend.
- To take (one or more) from the next higher denomination in order to add it to the next lower; -- a term of subtraction when the figure of the subtrahend is larger than the corresponding one of the minuend.
- To feign or counterfeit.
- To receive; to take; to derive.
- To be needlessly troubled; to be overapprehensive.
- N/A
BORROW vs TAKE OVER: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To take or obtain (a thing) on pledge given for its return, or without pledge, but on the understanding that the thing obtained is to be returned, or an equivalent of the same kind is to be substituted for it; hence, to obtain the temporary use of: with of or from (formerly at): as, to borrow a book from a friend; to borrow money of a stranger.
- To assume or usurp, as something counterfeit, feigned, or not real; assume out of some pretense.
- In golf, when putting across sloping ground, to play the ball a little up the slope to counteract its effect.
- A term used specifically in organ-building: of a pipe which improperly takes the wind from another and sounds at the latter's expense; of a stop or set of pipes which is incomplete in itself, but which is filled out by using some of the pipes of another stop or set: within certain limits the latter arrangement is entirely legitimate, since it renders possible the use of the same pipes in two distinct connections.
- To be surety for; hence, to redeem; ransom.
- To practise borrowing; take or receive loans; appropriate to one's self what belongs to another or others: as, I neither borrow nor lend; he borrows freely from other authors.
- Nautical, to approach either land or the wind closely.
- To take or receive gratuitously from another or from a foreign source and apply to one's own use; adopt; appropriate; by euphemism, to steal or plagiarize: as, to borrow aid; English has many borrowed words; to borrow an author's style, ideas, or language.
- (idiom) (borrow trouble) To take an unnecessary action that will probably engender adverse effects.
- Take as one's right or possession
- Take over ownership of
- Of corporations and companies
BORROW vs TAKE OVER: RELATED WORDS
- Take, Choose, Quote, Use, Paraphrase, Pay, Raise, Loan, Loans, Lending, Debt, Lend, Take up, Take over, Adopt
- Bear, Accept, Relieve, Assume, Repeat, Conquer, Adopt, Borrow, Usurp, Capture, Arrogate, Seize, Take up, Buy out, Take on
BORROW vs TAKE OVER: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Spare, Bail, Take, Choose, Quote, Use, Paraphrase, Pay, Raise, Loan, Loans, Lending, Debt, Take up, Take over
- Appropriate, Annex, Buy up, Bear, Accept, Relieve, Repeat, Conquer, Usurp, Capture, Arrogate, Seize, Take up, Buy out, Take on
BORROW vs TAKE OVER: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Treasury runs out of authority to borrow money.
- When you borrow your car, you can also borrow your car insurance policy.
- Borrow Against Stocks: If you still have a stock portfolio with a considerable amount of value, you can borrow against that stock.
- You can borrow as much or as you need over a period of time, paying interest only on what you borrow.
- It is always important to understand the terms under which you borrow money and to never borrow more than you can afford.
- If you do borrow the money, whatever you do borrow is added to your loan balance.
- The amount you can borrow based on how much you could borrow, what it might cost you per and.
- To maintain a satisfactory score, pay your bills on time, borrow only when necessary, and pay in full whenever you do borrow.
- When governments borrow, they compete with everybody else in the economy who wants to borrow the limited amount of savings available.
- Never borrow money needlessly, but if you must borrow call HFC.
- When we take over an association, we take care of everything that needs to be done.
- Did you agree on your own to take over these very large costs, or were you directed to take over these very large costs?
- After you take over Primm for the NCR, it seems they never send over that extra squad.
- Charles I or II, though both men hover over the narrative and take over in parts.
- After baby has learned to take a bottle, dad can take over these feedings.
- DDA will take another six months to take over the land.
- Medicaid take over is actually to plan for Medicaid to take over.
- If you want to take over your city, for me, when I was growing up in Philly, I wanted to take over my city.
- Returnto freedom group has longterm holding and they take over these horses or the Cloud Foundation take over these horses, something like that.
- DOJ take over the investigation, or take over jury proceedings, or prosecution?
BORROW vs TAKE OVER: QUESTIONS
- Do emerging market firms borrow in foreign currency?
- Can external students borrow books from the library?
- How much can subcontractors borrow to buy property?
- Should graduate students borrow money during the summer?
- What causes the federal government to borrow money?
- Did discord borrow Trixie's manuscript without asking?
- Did Anerlisa Muigai borrow money from Dennis mwageka?
- Did Shuai Jiao borrow techniques from modern taekwondo?
- Is the amount you qualify to borrow what you should borrow?
- What Pokemon is silcoon in trade borrow borrow steal?
- When did ONCAP take over Hopkins Manufacturing Corporation?
- When did the Australian government take over Telstra?
- Will DNA analysis take over traditional diagnostic tests?
- When did Allegra Stratton take over Downing Street?
- When did Barclaycard take over Providian National Bank?
- When did Paul Lambert take over Wolverhampton Wanderers?
- When did LANPAR take over paper-based spreadsheets?
- When did Blackstone take over Freescale Semiconductor?
- How long did it take the Russian mafia to take over America?
- Can spirits take over people but not take possession?