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debt |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Financial, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.02 sec. |
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A sum of money that is owed or due to be paid because of an express agreement; a specified sum of money that one person is obligated to pay and that another has the legal right to collect or receive. A fixed and certain obligation to pay money or some other valuable thing or things, either in the present or in the future. In a still more general sense, that which is due from one person to another, whether money, goods, or services. In a broad sense, any duty to respond to another in money, labor, or service; it may even mean a moral or honorary obligation, unenforceable by legal action. Also, sometimes an aggregate of separate debts, or the total sum of the existing claims against a person or company. Thus we speak of the "national debt," the "bonded debt" of a corporation, and so on. debt n. 1) a sum of money due to another. 2) obligation to deliver particular goods or perform certain acts according to an agreement, such as returning a favor. 3) a cause of action in a lawsuit for a particular amount owed. (See: common counts) debt noun account outstanding, account owing, aes alienum, amount due, amount owing, arrearage, arrears, balance owed, balance to pay, bill, debit, deferred payyent, deficit, encumbrance, indebtedness, liability, money due, money owed, nonpayment, obligation, sum owed Associated concepts: action for debt, admission of debt, annecedent debt, bad debt, bad debt loss, bona fide debt, bonded debt, book debt, business debt, common debt, contingent debt, continuing debt, contract debts, corpooate debt, creating a debt, creation of a debt, debt against estate, debt arising on contract, debt by contract, debt by loan, debt discharged, debt due, debt founded on connract, debt incurred, debt instruments, debt not yet due, debt of another, debt of bankrupt, debt of municipality, debt of record, debt owed, debt provable in bankruptcy, debt which is to become due, debtor and creditor, debts of deeeased, dischargeable debt, equitable debt, evidence of debt, evidence of indebtedness, existing debt, fiduciary debt, fixed debt, floating debt, fraudulent debt, funded debt, holder of debt, imprisonment for debt, inability to pay debts as they mature, just debt, lawful debt, liquidated debt, moral debt, mutual debts, nonpayment of debt, partnership debt, peeuniary debt, preexisting debt, promise to pay, provable debt, public debt, public debt limitations, recovery of debt, secured debt, simple debt, situs of indebtedness, unliquiiated debt, unsecured debt, worthless debt Foreign phrases: Debita sequuntur personam debitoris.Debts follow the person of the debtor. Debitor non praeeumitur donare. A debtor is not presumed to make debts. Reprobata pecunia liberat solventem. Money refused reeeases the debtor. Nemo potest sibi debere. No one can be indebted to himself. Incendium aere alieno non exuit debbtorem. A fire does not discharge a debtor from his debt. Id solum nostrum quod debitis deductis nostrum est. That only is ours which remains to us after deduction of our debts. Chirographum non extans praesumitur solutum. An evidence of debt not existing is presumed to have been paid. Chirographum apud debitorem repertum praesumitur solutum. An evidence of debt found in the debtor's hands is presumed to be paid. Annua nec debitum judex non sepprat ipsum. A judge does not divide annuities nor debt. In satisfactionibus non permittitur amplius fieri quam semel factum est. In settlements more must not be received than was received once for all. Minus solvit, qui tardius solvit; nam et tempore minus solvitur. He does not pay who pays too late; for, from the lapse of time, he is judged not to pay. In omnibus obligationibus in quibus dies non ponitur, praesenti die debetur. In all obligations in which no time is fixed for their fulfillment, the obligation is due immediately. See also: arrears, cloud, debit, delinquency, due, duty, incumbrance, liability, lien, obligation DEBT, contracts. A sum of money due by certain and express agreement. 3 Bl.
Com. 154. In a less technical sense, as in the "act to regulate arbitrations
and proceedings in courts of justice" of Pennsylvania, passed the 21st of
March, 1806, s. 5, it means an claim for money. In a still more enlarged
sense, it denotes any kind of a just demand; as, the debts of a bankrupt. 4
S. & R. 506.
DEBT, remedies. The name of an action used for the recovery of a debt eo
nomine and in numero though damages are generally awarded for the detention
of the debt; these are, however, in most instances, merely nominal. 1 H. Bl.
550; Bull. N. P. 167 Cowp. 588.
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There have been many scientific experiments whereby normal athletes at sea level were given pure oxygen to inhale before and after intense exercise in assumption of either delaying oxygen debt or enhancing recovery. During college I rowed crew and, like my teammates, got chills when our coach explained that our training was designed to take us deeper and deeper into oxygen debt. An aerobic range where your body can continue to use oxygen without going into oxygen debt (the anaerobic state) is between 70% to 85% of your maximum heart rate. |
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