Guaranty in a sentence as a noun

If you try to apply this to almost Mach 1 problems, you void the guaranty.

There was no guaranty that any images would be available from the Hazcams.

Any time you break the guaranty of getting it done right you just cost a lot of thought and effort for a large number of people.

Now, ads are the only nasty thing that break the guaranty of side-effect-free GET requests.

Even if I install on 2 machines, there's no guaranty that the repo owner won't push changes in the meantime.

On the other side of the coin, there was little guaranty that most state run businesses would survive any way. Yes, some were bought up by by shady characters, dismantled and sold of by parts for profit.

And how the current so called corporate structure need not necessarily guaranty success.

Sure, past performance is no guaranty of future results, but I and many others believe this trend will only increase in the future.

I don't understand how the executive branch can guaranty immunity from civil action in the judicial branch.

That are 4 big risks: low number of customers, no guaranty to get any dollar next month and a high dependence on one plattform and high dependence on the success of this one app.

A per-review is not a guaranty that the article is correct, but at least it guaranty that some expert in that area had read the article and had no found any major fault.

Usually those kinds of contracts are presented with guaranty of a severence package or at least a single big check, which is supposed to ameliorate/attenuate any hard feelings.

The constitutional guaranty of the right of the people to be secure in their papers against unreasonable searches and seizures extends to their papers, thus closed against inspection, wherever they may be.

I would almost guaranty it will have extreme android integration, which would give it an obvious advantage over any other cloud storage app on android.>>Was I the only one expecting Google to knock this one out of the park, a la Gmail's introduction?We haven't seen the announcement, so saying that feels a bit early, but realistically, I am not sure what they could do that would be terribly interesting.

Guaranty definitions

noun

a collateral agreement to answer for the debt of another in case that person defaults

See also: guarantee