Disbursement in a sentence as a noun

I also didn't like the method for escrow/disbursement of payments.

They have the perfect way to do so, iPhone/iPad app & they take care of payment processing / disbursement.

Coinbase delays the disbursement to keep you from chargebacking.

In conjunction, with a team of lobbyists to influence the increased disbursement of funds to towns to help in the "war on terror".

Given that he got his first stock disbursement last week and was due $58 million over the next few years if he hung around, I'm guessing he was pushed.

I do not believe I suggested he would be surrendering his shares, but rather, that he will not be taking a cash disbursement.

The money could be put into escrow for disbursement to do something at a later point, but at least you get bought in enough to see the flop.

The IRS used the constructive \n receipt doctrine to conclude the amount levied from an IRA was a \n disbursement – it had to be included as income.

"I can develop loan disbursement software and ecommerce stuff, surely I can handle changing the radiator in my car, and did, saving myself hundreds of dollars.

What's to stop a corporate raider from stirring up a revolt for disbursement of the cash/share buybacks?He can be philanthropic AND support Musk, false equivalence on his part.

Sadly, you can only roll it over during a 'qualifying event' which is either you leave the company, the company drops the 401k, or reach the minimum age for disbursement.

For a sampling of things i've seen[1]:* The capital disbursement problem is hard, and that it naturally evolves into this pattern, similar to hubs in a scale-free network.

My other car's radiator was shot - and if I can develop loan disbursement software and ecommerce stuff, surely I can handle changing the radiator in my car, and did, saving myself hundreds of dollars.

I haven't done full time freelance so feel free to shoot this idea down, but I'm always curious as to why freelancers don't just put their income in a separate, harder-to-access bank account and pay themselves a regular, weekly disbursement from that.

> I don't get why writers try to abuse copyright law to artificially constrain the disbursement of their materialThat's not an abuse of copyright law, that's it's exact purpose.> Instead, I'd attach a donation link [...]Just because you can make up numbers where this is successful doesn't mean it would be successful, or give any insight into the situations that are most amenable to it.

Disbursement definitions

noun

amounts paid for goods and services that may be currently tax deductible (as opposed to capital expenditures)

See also: expense disbursal

noun

the act of spending or disbursing money

See also: spending disbursal outlay