Repayment in a sentence as a noun

It's unclear how such a repayment scheme would work in practice.

And when it comes due, the noteholder has a legal right to sue for its repayment if it is not paid.

And under the new paradigm, debt is the way to go. Especially with the new PAY-E repayment terms.

I hope my meager contributions a few years back were at least a bit of repayment on a much larger bill.

They don't have to also predict what the real value of that repayment will be in other currencies.

And if all US/EUR/AUD/etc debts will be converted into BTC debts for purposes of repayment, what prices will they use for the actual conversion?

A mortgage that is on track to be repaid is undoubtedly worth close to the future value of repayment, even if the house is worth $0.

You as the lender demand repayment of your principal and interest payments concordant with the risks you take that the money does not come back to you.

Any government backed student loan should have a simple repayment schedule -- a maximum of 15% of your earnings for 10 years following graduation.

In a case such as this, the creditor may be estopped from relying on their legal right to repayment, as the creditor has represented that he no longer treats the debt as extant.

The argument that the value of an underwater mortgage in repayment is worth less than the house is so obviously wrong, I have a hard time believing Richmond officials honestly buy it.

The Icelandic people felt that the legal ambiguity on the legality of holding the Icelandic government responsible meant that if any repayment was to be done it should be shouldered by both parties.

Lots of brand new companies would have a much higher success chance and EV with 94% equity, $33k cash in the bank, and $33k in debt with flexible repayment terms than 100% equity, $0 cash, and $0 debt.-Money's worth a lot, and people often underestimate how much it's worth.

Repayment definitions

noun

the act of returning money received previously

See also: refund

noun

payment of a debt or obligation

See also: quittance