Convert in a sentence as a noun

This article made me finally bite the bullet and convert.

We can convert the thing to hundred dollar bills, and put it next to the statue of liberty!

Doctor's are being paid to convert to electronic records.

This might be called an "optional convertible" note and I remember doing many of these back in the day as a lawyer.

Despite its title it isn't an textbook, but a manifesto, and as such Hazlitt's goal isn't to educate you, but to convert you.

The safe seeks to confer the benefits of a convertible instrument without carrying with it the baggage of debt.

The convertible note meets this need by combining the attributes of debt and equity instruments.

This mindset all changed during the bubble era, when convertible notes came in to help solve the early-stage funding problem.

Convert in a sentence as a verb

The administration says the poverty line is around 2200CHF per month for someone living alone [2].You can't really just convert to $ and say it's a lot of money.

Strings were defined as sequences of bytes, and then provided a .decode method to convert them to a unicode object that stores them as a sequence of codepoints.

I've been very, very impressed with New Relic's "use it for free, convert upmarket for additional features" model, and it's apparently worked well for them.

So, for instance, an investor would loan $50K at 10% interest at a time when the company had little value but could elect to convert at, say, $.50/sh at any time in the sole discretion of the investor.

" Apart from a very vibrant context such as YC, where investor demand is already high, I am not sure how well that will sell when all the investor needs to say in response is, "how about us just doing a convertible note instead.

The convertible note supplanted an earlier form of convertible note used many years back by which individual investors would see startups as being much akin to small businesses and would loan the money to the venture with the primary aim of making a good interest return on their investment.

" I personally believe that for the general range of cases the pull toward a conventional convertible note will be very strong, and founders will have real difficulty convincing investors why they should forego the benefits of a convertible note in favor of a convertible security where the only advantages to the latter lie strictly with the company.

If, however, the company can do a qualified funding before the note matures, the debt converts into preferred-stock equity on the terms struck with the equity investors at first funding, usually with a price discount, sometimes with a price cap, and typically with merger-premium protection for the converting noteholders for the added risk they take in being early in the game when risks are at their highest.

Convert definitions

noun

a person who has been converted to another religious or political belief

verb

change from one system to another or to a new plan or policy; "We converted from 220 to 110 Volt"

verb

change the nature, purpose, or function of something; "convert lead into gold"; "convert hotels into jails"; "convert slaves to laborers"

verb

change religious beliefs, or adopt a religious belief; "She converted to Buddhism"

verb

exchange or replace with another, usually of the same kind or category; "Could you convert my dollars into pounds?"; "He changed his name"; "convert centimeters into inches"; "convert holdings into shares"

See also: change exchange commute

verb

cause to adopt a new or different faith; "The missionaries converted the Indian population"

verb

score an extra point or points after touchdown by kicking the ball through the uprights or advancing the ball into the end zone; "Smith converted and his team won"

verb

complete successfully; "score a penalty shot or free throw"

verb

score (a spare)

verb

make (someone) agree, understand, or realize the truth or validity of something; "He had finally convinced several customers of the advantages of his product"

See also: convince

verb

exchange a penalty for a less severe one

See also: commute exchange

verb

change in nature, purpose, or function; undergo a chemical change; "The substance converts to an acid"