Bankrupt in a sentence as a noun

Knight Capital lost a bunch of money, and will likely go bankrupt.

In the game world, pirates cause studios to go bankrupt.

I bought all the Epson TM printers for my friend from a bankrupt Chinese restaurant.

The latter faction eventually gains control to an extent that they bankrupt the whole.

Right now, when one pissed off developer leaves or goes bankrupt because their app was yanked from the store or wasn't approved for some BS reason, 50 developers replace him.

Bankrupt in a sentence as a verb

If you go bankrupt, you will lose friends, and your employment opportunities will be circumscribed in a manner similar to being on a blacklist.

Because of the amount of investment going on, I don't worry about novices who go bankrupt trying to build a printer after a successful crowd funding campaign.

There the Jew, the Mahometan, and the Christian deal with one another as if they were of the same religion and reserve the name of infidel for those who go bankrupt.

By the end of the first week, I was bankrupt although I had a huge stockpile of HQ buffs - but most importantly, virtually every buff vendor was empty except mine.

It can be fascinating and beautiful and it can send you mad. Fall into the trap of believing that poker is a worthwhile pursuit of itself and you end up in the trap - living out of your car or on the crappy end of the Vegas strip, some weeks a millionaire, some weeks a bankrupt.

Bankrupt in a sentence as an adjective

Americans of proper breeding and with the educational attainment and moral worth to become salarymen would simply never go bankrupt.

An application to join the European Union has been filed by the Icelandic government but it is generally considered to be a first step in negotiations as opposed to being a commitment to join.-- Iceland did not go bankrupt.

You should, however, pack your resume [+].America has a very low bankruptcy rate, principally because it is treated as a social sin somewhere between notoriously cheating on one's spouse or doing something really dastardly like backstabbing a company by quitting it.

Welcome to America, where we read your private mail, track all your movements online, shoot your dogs, abuse you at the borders, put antibiotics in your food, bankrupt you when you get sick, throw you in jail with hardened criminals if you smoke a spliff, and drone-execute you with no warrant if the president doesn't like you.

And, if you think that a person who goes bankrupt because they can no longer charge for their work isn't harmed, you need a new definition of "harm".One more thing: saying - as you do - that "it's just a bunch of ones and zeroes" to a person who may have sweated blood and tears for years to produce the arrangement that actually attracted your attention is just awful.

Bankrupt definitions

noun

someone who has insufficient assets to cover their debts

See also: insolvent

verb

reduce to bankruptcy; "My daughter's fancy wedding is going to break me!"; "The slump in the financial markets smashed him"

See also: ruin break smash

adjective

financially ruined; "a bankrupt company"; "the company went belly-up"