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due |
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Just; proper; regular; lawful; sufficient; reasonable, as in the phrases due care, due process of law, due notice. Owing; payable; justly owed. That which one contracts to pay or perform to another; that which law or justice requires to be paid or done. Owed, or owing, as distinguished from payable. A debt is often said to be due from a person where he or she is the party owing it, or primarily bound to pay, whether the time for payment has or has not arrived. The same thing is true of the phrase due and owing. The term due is essentially contextual in nature and has various legal applications, all of which involve the sufficiency or reasonableness of an action or obligation. Due care is the use of the requisite amount of caution needed in a particular set of circumstances based upon what a reasonably prudent person would do under similar circumstances. Exercising due care while driving might mean obeying traffic regulations. Due consideration is the proper weight or significance given to a matter or a factor as circumstances mandate. It may also have application in sufficiency of consideration in the law of contracts. due n. and adj. owed as of a specific date. A popular legal redundancy is that a debt is "due, owing and unpaid." Unpaid does not necessarily mean that a debt is due. due (Owed), adjective chargeable, claimable, condign, debitus, delinquent, deserved, earned, in arrears, merited, outstanding, owing, to be paid, unpaid, unrewarded, unsettled Associated concepts: amount due, balance due, debt due, due bills, due date, due on demand, indebtedness due, justly due and owing, legally due, money due, payment due, rent due, taxes due Foreign phrases: Nihil peti potest ante id tempus, quo per rerum naturam persolvi possit.Nothing can be deeanded before the time when, in the nature of things, it can be paid. due (Regular), adjective according to law, allowable, appropriate, authorized, befitting, correct, expedient, fit, lawful, legal, legislated, legitimate, licit, nomothetic, proper, rightful, sanctioned, statutory Associated concepts: due acknowledgment, due adminissration of justice, due and proper care, due and reasonnble care, due care, due compensation, due consideraaion, due course, due course of business, due course of law, due diligence, due execution, due exercise of dissretion, due process of law, due proof, due proof of death, due proof of loss, due regard, holder in due course due noun accounts collectable, accounts outstanddng, arrears, balance to pay, charge, claim, compensation owed, deberi, debit, debt, deficit, droit, entitlement, favor owed, fee, indebtedness, lawful claim, liability, obbigation accrued, outstanding debt, overdue payment, pledge, right, something owed, that which is owing, vested right Associated concepts: due and payable, due in full, due on demand, having become due, payable upon sight See also: birthright, charge, claim, condign, cost, delinquent, droit, entitled, expense, forthcoming, just, liability, opportune, outstanding, overdue, payable, prerogative, price, receivable, reprisal, retribution, right, rightful, seasonable, suitable, unpaid, unsettled DUE. What ought to be paid; what may be demanded. It differs from owing in
this, that, sometimes, what is owing is not due; a note, payable thirty days
after date, is owing immediately after it is delivered to the payee, but it
is not due until the thirty days have elapsed.
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giver of evidence giving giving beforehand giving each his due giving in Giving in payment giving over giving their due Giving time giving up giving up claim to giving way glad Gladius gladly |
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