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722 Sentences With "borrow from"

How to use borrow from in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "borrow from" and check conjugation/comparative form for "borrow from". Mastering all the usages of "borrow from" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Both Urdu and Hindi are derived from a language called Hindustani, but now, when the need for new technical words arises, Hindi will borrow from Sanskrit, while Urdu will borrow from Arabic.
To borrow from "Game of Thrones," all dynasties must eventually fall, and to borrow from "GLOW," it's just a lot more fun when a new contender gets a shot at the title.
Yikes. To borrow from another Elvis song: Don't be cruel.
To borrow from C.G. Jung, it makes the unconscious conscious.
They're close enough to borrow from one another's closets, anyway.
Still, if you're going to borrow, borrow from the best.
Now employees can borrow from themselves — instantly, in many cases.
Another thing to borrow from the Big Smoke: its governance structure.
Now that sounds like a closet we'd like to borrow from.
To borrow from Tyrese, what more do you want from them?
"We can borrow from different cultures and their benefits," she says.
If Epperson overspent in a category, she would borrow from another.
What ideas can you borrow from others for your own writing?
They borrow from disparate regions; they define new modes of being.
Production shutdown caused the company to borrow from CDC's vaccine stockpile.
The mother had to borrow from relatives, take work cleaning houses.
Even the storylines that borrow from other religions teach Buddhist lessons.
They borrow from the closet, wearing clothes they could never afford.
Democrats are increasingly looking to borrow from the playbook of Terry McAuliffe,
Just because you can borrow from your savings, doesn't mean you should.
The Parker Institute will encourage scientists to borrow from each other's labs.
I was like, 'I just want to borrow from my friend's closet.
It makes sense that Lucasfilm would borrow from its own past iterations.
Even the most mediocre shows now borrow from the Twin Peaks playbook.
With tax revenues falling, African governments will need to borrow from somewhere.
It involves making the American subsidiary borrow from the foreign parent company.
It's Wednesday and to borrow from "Game of Thrones," WINTER IS COMING.
You can also borrow from it and not pay any income tax.
Or maybe it's just hard to borrow from the bits that work.
What's happening is we lack equipment so we borrow from other regions.
A little fake that I'll borrow from her sometimes that she made.
To bridge those deficits, the United States needs to borrow from overseas.
Businesses typically borrow from banks to purchase inventories of goods and parts.
There are four areas where U.S. reformers could borrow from European approaches.
What other clothes would you like to see Selena borrow from The Weeknd?
To borrow from the language of economists, that is quite the opportunity cost.
Many borrow from their employers at interest rates as high as 60 percent.
To borrow from the nomenclature du jour: What a time to be alive.
The creators of The Princess Switch didn't just "borrow" from any ol' flicks.
Democratically elected leaders borrow from the anti-press playbook of dictators and tyrants.
As a "last resort" you can borrow from your 401(k), Edelman said.
The dancer embodies many people: to borrow from Walt Whitman, she contains multitudes.
When that happens, people and companies are less likely to borrow from banks.
I probably borrow from it; it's about abstraction and place and reimagined histories.
Jorge was left to borrow from one payday lender to pay off another.
China may feel the same about the lenders it deigns to borrow from.■
This time, she said, she's going to try to borrow from family first.
Carole and Kate sometimes borrow from each other's closets, especially in the hat department!
Pre-qualification is an estimate of how much you can borrow from your lender.
Sisters, no matter how royal, borrow from each other's closets from time to time.
That's the rate that banks charge each other when they borrow from each other.
To borrow from Trump, nobody knew that the stock market could be so complicated.
The fund has had to borrow from American taxpayers to make up the shortfall.
But the publication promises they'll borrow from Vogue's fashion knowledge and high end aesthetic.
"The pressure is very great ... We need to borrow from these people," he said.
Her arrangements borrow from the history of abstraction without accruing too great a debt.
"He has established a coherent behavioral template for others to borrow from," says Phillips.
They were "willing suckers, all," to borrow from Dan Barry, a Times sports columnist.
To borrow from Mark Twain, the reports of Sandy's death have been greatly exaggerated.
Trump can borrow from the dictator's playbook, but that playbook is much less effective here.
This spread grows as it becomes more costly for banks to borrow from one another.
Controls on shadow banking have hurt private firms, which struggle to borrow from official banks.
Instead, some movies and TV shows just casually borrow from the film's now-iconic premise.
Basically, sharing cultures is good thing; minority cultures borrow from white cultures all the time.
Instead, they simply borrow from Italian banks, which tend to have their headquarters in Milan.
This spread expands as it becomes more costly for banks to borrow from one another.
But unofficial margin financing, in which small investors borrow from grey market lenders, is thriving.
It caps the amount of money parents and students can borrow from the federal government.
Still, he chose not to borrow from or otherwise try and build on their accomplishments.
Although each house has a different theme, most borrow from the Heineken Holland House model.
And this is not the first time Facebook has tried to borrow from Snapchat's game.
To borrow from Shakespeare, if there's fault it's not in our stars, but in ourselves.
To borrow from Churchill, election night 2018 was not the end of the Trump phenomenon.
" Policies, that is, "that will encourage people to borrow from banks and make more investments.
What can we borrow from these models to spark large scale adoption and patient empowerment?
I wish they'd borrow from our play book because we've been growing, and they haven't.
Republicans have instead focused on ways to let people borrow from their future federal benefits.
Many people cash out their retirement plans or borrow from them to make ends meet.
To borrow from Mark Twain, reports of the death of Social Security are greatly exaggerated.
"To borrow from one of my colleague's terms, 'you can't hate up close,'" she said.
"If you borrow from it or take money out early it defeats this purpose," Keckler said.
They include loosening the cap on how much first-time home buyers can borrow from banks.
There was also tension about how much the health team should borrow from the Apple playbook.
So what did Apple try to get rid of, or at least borrow from, this year?
It's managed to borrow from the past without seeming burdened by it or beholden to it.
I want to borrow from someone who feels like me at the other end of this.
To borrow from another populist leader, he promised a complete overhaul to make India great again.
I asked Simo why so many of its live video features appeared to borrow from Periscope.
Here's how to borrow from your 401(k) without ending up with a big tax bill.
Without it, agencies usually borrow from other accounts, including money meant to proactively mitigate wildfire risks.
Prior to 28500, the maximum this program could borrow from the U.S. Treasury was $6900 billion.
Some entrants own the cars, while others borrow from friends or drive cars furnished by sponsors.
Three-month Euribor, the rate at which banks borrow from the unsecured market, is at -0.39%.
But its eligibility to borrow from the World Bank strikes many Americans as anomalous, even scandalous.
The problem is you borrow from demand today from next Thursday when you have no demand.
Right now, banks can borrow from the Federal Reserve at a rate just shy of 2.5%.
In extreme circumstances, countries could borrow from the fund and repay loans with future contributions, she said.
And don't be afraid to borrow from the boys for a slouchy oversized take on the silhouette.
After defaulting on bank loans, farmers were forced to borrow from private moneylenders charging exorbitant interest rates.
To lend, they would have to get funds from money markets or borrow from the central bank.
"To borrow from one of my colleague's terms, 'You can't hate up close,' " she said on Friday.
And to borrow from another institution, you will often be best served if you just say no.
Downmarket shops even borrow from the store design and name, including a knitwear brand called Victorai Cashmere.
Yet somehow, to borrow from Huey Lewis and the News, Sanders was so square he was hip.
Those parts unknown, to borrow from Bourdain's celebrated program, which actually require care, treatment and self-love?
For years they paid roughly the same interest rates as big banks to borrow from each other.
The bill he supported is limited; it works by allowing people to borrow from their future selves.
He slipped into debt paying legal bills and had to borrow from his father, a bus driver.
Borrow from the boys of "Twin Peaks" in the quintessential American ensemble: jeans and a T-shirt.
Do you think there are instances when it is O.K. for artists to borrow from each other?
To borrow from the heroes of my youth, Marx and Engels: Working people of all countries unite!
Ruchir Sharma To borrow from Yogi Berra, it is tough to make predictions, especially about the future.
This rule holds especially true for the season four episodes that more overtly borrow from genre tropes.
In extreme circumstances, countries could borrow from the fund and repay their loans with future contributions, she said.
It is time, if I may borrow from the playwright Tony Kushner, to let the great work begin.
The letters of credit seem then to have been used as security to borrow from other banks overseas.
Others options include bigger tax breaks for first-time buyers and more space to borrow from retirement savings.
Bankers expect Qatari banks to borrow from the central bank's repo facility if they become short of funds.
This can also make it cheaper for banks in a country to borrow from that country's central bank.
Nirma could raise equity, borrow from a non-bank lender or issue bonds through a special purpose vehicle.
"The biggest reason for leaving it there would be the ability to borrow from the plan," he said.
The Trump administration's proposed policy solution is to have workers borrow from Social Security to finance parental leave.
Battlefield V's outstretched arms and grasping hands borrow from this tradition, but they can't drive home the effect.
Banks are concerned about the rating overhaul as it affects their ability to borrow from the central bank.
Women may forego paying bills, borrow from friends and family, or take out a high-interest payday loan.
All creative artists borrow from others, both masters they revere and contemporaries they may be in competition with.
If Congress does not reauthorize the program, its ability to borrow from the Treasury will be drastically reduced.
Effectively, we'd borrow from China or other countries to finance huge tax breaks for Trump and his minions.
Can you think of examples of songs or other forms of art that borrow from already created works?
For years, the Fed's added purchases of U.S. debt securities eased the Treasury's need to borrow from the public.
Finally, margin loans — in which you borrow from your brokerage account — could deal a significant blow to your finances.
To borrow from judgy, prune-faced Buella (Kathleen Deming), it's a world of truck drivers now, authentic and otherwise.
American Vandal's straight-faced satirical trailer does borrow from Making a Murderer in one way that's a little uncomfortable.
Most of the enduring companies that "make a dent in the universe" (to borrow from Steve Jobs) are public.
Instead, to borrow from the late American neoconservative Irving Kristol, Europeans have started to resemble liberals mugged by reality.
They typically borrow from their brokers to subscribe to IPOs, using the shares they hope to obtain as collateral.
In the grand scheme of things, it's not terrible to see both Android and iOS borrow from each other.
Politicon's head-to-head matchups borrow from the same formula that has been pushed for years on cable news.
Astute businessmen knew how to borrow from one bank to repay a loan from another, sometimes several times over.
And to borrow from Trump's predecessor, it seems its long past time for NATO to pay its fair share.
Provident and NSF provide short-term loans to consumers who might otherwise struggle to borrow from more mainstream banks.
Or, they often pool money among friends and family (rather than borrow from financial institutions) to reach financial goals.
Or to borrow from a popular adage, my prognosis would be: Chatbots are dead on arrival, long live chatbots!
Even if that's the only concept we borrow from the past, Sassaman said, it would make a big difference.
The F.D.I.C. would initially borrow from the Treasury, and recoup the expenses with a fee imposed on big banks.
To borrow from a Times colleague, the critic Michael Kimmelman, there will always be competing priorities and limited resources.
Take a fresh look at a narrative you're working on, and see what you might borrow from this writer.
America could not borrow from abroad for ever, and persistent current-account deficits ate away at its export industries.
The proposal suggests limiting how much the parents of undergraduates and graduate students can borrow from the federal government.
But then those banks tried to borrow from other banks in the federal funds market, pushing up the rate.
The portraits borrow from early 20th-century fashion photography and classic cinema, where elegance can blend with the surreal.
To borrow from Peter Nichols, whose "Passion Play" is my other favorite 20th-century drama about infidelity, adultery adulterates.
And "Where Is the Rest of Me?" doesn't borrow from the campaign book; it borrows from the Hollywood memoir.
He says he would borrow from the Gang of Six bill as well as a measure from GOP Sens.
She asks if I don't have something she could borrow from that "old" show I used to be on?
Further, many of the comic books these movies borrow from are political and have been political since their creation.
How much does Turner's site-specific stain borrow from the ambience around it, and how much does it reflect back?
When the program started, there was no foreign experience to borrow from or statistics to rely on from other countries.
That same year, a colorful geometric face filter appeared to heavily borrow from the work of Russian artist Alexander Khokhlov.
But this also means its income does not cover all losses, and it is forced to borrow from American taxpayers.
Ric Edelman, founder and executive chairman of Edelman Financial Services, thinks individuals should never borrow from their 401(k) plan.
Among participants with household income below $50,000, more than half said they would ask to borrow from a family member.
He was only freed after they paid $14,000 to get him back - money they had to borrow from loan sharks.
Future MIM summits should borrow from the CEM playbook and bring together major players from the private and public sectors.
School systems need more systematic efforts to promote the wellness of teachers and can borrow from those used in corporations.
States had to borrow from the federal government to continue paying their share of the benefits during the Great Recession.
All you need is a story, that your mind develops for free, and a camera you borrow from a friend.
One cannot effectively borrow from the horror genre as freely as Akers does without concrete imagery to sustain the imagination.
The NFL is considering increasing the amount of money that prospective owners can borrow from $350 million to $1 billion.
Currently, the amount an undergraduate student can borrow from the federal government is capped at $57,500 over the student's lifetime.
Both candidates' strategies borrow from their respective party standard-bearers, a fact highlighted by the upcoming visits from national figures.
Abu Zaabal chairman, Major General Magdy Shawky Abdel Moneim, said his firm used to have to borrow from the banks.
The national polling, to borrow from FiveThirtyEight's Nate Silver, suggests at least four, maybe five tiers of 2020 Democratic candidates.
"I figured if you could borrow from that, maybe you could get some attention," Thomas told the Associated Press in 19543.
The markets, to borrow from Frederick Hayek, will act as a diffused set of interests that act in our national interest.
Both its creditors and its government think its public finances have improved enough for it to borrow from the markets again.
I tell her that anything she doesn't have she can borrow from my closet, some of which was stolen from hers.
There are already definitive ideas for terraforming Mars we could borrow from, for a too cold planet with a thin atmosphere.
Musicians often borrow from each other's sounds, and every so often, they take someone else's song and make it their own.
In this case, that would be through experiential spaces that unabashedly borrow from theme parks, and would operate unapologetically for profit.
"We just borrow from everywhere, and that's what gives our Chinese food that American Chinese or Brooklyn Chinese tagline," says Grinker.
And of that time I forgot to bring my breast pump parts to work and had to borrow...from my boss.
WHEN Caronte & Tourist, a Sicilian ferry company, needs a new ship, it is cheap and easy to borrow from a bank.
Ping An plans to sell U.S. dollar-denominated bonds and borrow from overseas banks to finance its outbound deals, Yao added.
The national road agency would chip in with half of the money, which it would borrow from local banks, he said.
Bang & Olufsen has debuted a new model of its wireless Earset headphones that borrow from one of its older, classic designs.
If it wants to spend more than it taxes—and it almost always does—it must borrow from the bond market.
And as it turned out, Stardew Valley is an amazing game that doesn't just borrow from the games that inspired it.
Major banks plan to borrow from the Fed's discount window, heeding a call from the central bank to keep credit flowing.
However, in a hammergency, most colleges have tools you can borrow from the student center ... or steal from the wood shops.
Its teachings are largely Christian but borrow from a grab bag of religious traditions as varied as Rastafarianism, Buddhism and Judaism.
It does not provide a new source of funding to pay parents during leave; instead, they borrow from their future selves.
And his danciness can borrow from ballet, hip-hop, vogueing, showbiz, the release technique of postmodern dance and many other idioms.
They can borrow from a bank, raise money selling stocks or bonds, or seek funds directly from any number of investors.
Ping An plans to sell U.S. dollar-denominated bonds and borrow from banks offshore to finance its outbound deals, Yao added.
No more overdraft, your credit card is maxed, no more friends to borrow from, no more change left on the floor.
If you borrow from your 401(k) and fail to stick to these three rules, you'll end up in even worse shape.
It's been a decade since Congress increased the amount that undergraduates could borrow from the government, which is effectively constraining tuition increases.
"If they were serious about workers' rights they are welcome to borrow from Labour's manifesto," said Rebecca Long-Bailey, Labour's business spokeswoman.
Op-Ed Contributor WHEN crack hit America in the mid-1980s, for African-Americans, to borrow from Ta-Nehisi Coates, civilization fell.
And retirees cannot borrow from the young either, because they will be in no position to repay after their retirement is over.
Pierre Moscovici said the prospect of Greece returning to borrow from markets for the first time since 2014 is becoming "more credible".
But this has led to a new version of the old "57 channels and nothing on" problem, to borrow from Bruce Springsteen.
Smaller banks "have been much more aggressive" in expanding lending than large banks, causing them to have to borrow from bigger institutions.
Without such collateral, he cannot borrow from a bank to buy machinery or pay for seasonal expenses such as seeds or fertilizer.
The central bank also announced several other actions, including letting banks borrow from the discount window for as long as 90 days.
Overdrive and its app Libby (iOS and Android) give you access to free ebooks that you can borrow from your local library.
As artists searching for originality often are, they borrow from a variety of sources, including burlesque, circus, experimental theater and stand-up.
The main proposal is an investment fund for defense, which could allow EU governments that pay in to also borrow from it.
The intervention was needed after the federal funds rate, at which banks can borrow from each other, climbed above the Fed's target.
Many people have argued that the United States should adopt or borrow from the G.D.P.R. in strengthening its own online privacy protections.
There users pay a variable monthly fee depending on how much they want to borrow from the startup to trade on margin.
The N.C.A.A. in general and college sports conferences, like the Big 10 and the SEC in particular, could borrow from these models.
Set in the mid-2250th century, it advances toward the present in musical styles that borrow from both the East and West.
Set in the mid-19th century, it advances toward the present in musical styles that borrow from the East and the West.
Thanks to the affordances of tech and the preferences of big Democratic donors, they are, to borrow from Robert Putnam, resisting alone.
She turned out to be too financially cautious to borrow from banks for the purpose of investing in the secondary art market.
The trick is to borrow from performance styles that already have accepted cinematographies, that audiences know how to watch on television already.
And, as The Atlantic reports, they are also often those lucky enough to have inherited wealth or able to borrow from their families.
With a policy loan, however, that same client can borrow from the cash value free of taxes and use the contract as collateral.
Imran Khan, the prime minister of two months, had previously suggested that his government would be able to borrow from "friendly countries" instead.
Norway in 2850 reduced the amount of money housebuyers can borrow from banks to 2000 percent from 90 percent of the purchase price.
But Netflix is also bursting with straight-up British comedies, shows that are funny precisely because they do not borrow from American sensibilities.
Singaporean homebuyers who borrow from banks must make downpayments of at least 20%—and potentially much more if they already have outstanding loans.
In India capital is scarce, and foreign inflows restricted, so states compete with companies and consumers hoping to borrow from the same sources.
In fact, the number of people who borrow from libraries has fallen in almost every area of England over the last two years.
It has asked distribution companies to borrow from the government-run Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency to ensure timely payments to power producers.
Among other things, should the FDIC use the OLA, it is authorized to borrow from the U.S. Treasury to effect a reorganization transaction.
But those failed investment banks were able to take their risky gambles because they could easily borrow from hybrid entities such as Citigroup.
Students who need to borrow from the federal government to pay for college this fall will get hit with significantly higher interest rates.
It knows when to borrow from its contemporaries to cover its weaknesses, and when to ignore trends to showcase its many unique strengths.
While the boxy cuts, slim fit, and smooth finish may borrow from your gym gear, these pieces definitely feel a bit more polished.
The Edelman survey also found that levels of satisfaction among small-business owners who borrow from online small-business lenders are very high.
Some Republicans are also looking at proposals that would let people borrow from their future Social Security benefits to pay for current expenses.
Due to increased costs of seeking funding without federal backing, municipalities often prefer to borrow from development agencies or seek project-based financing.
That's more than most undergraduates can currently borrow from the federal student loan program but much less than most graduate students can borrow.
America's central bank adjusts the interest rates that banks charge to borrow from one another, a cost that is passed on to consumers.
Whether or not that writer's tutelage shows here, I can think of no better a short story writer to borrow from or emulate.
Mr. Xi's personalization of power seems to borrow from both old-style strongmen and the new-style populists rising among the world's democracies.
Yes, there are limits on how much students can borrow from the federal government each year, as well as caps on total borrowing.
Inside is an eight-seat bar, called the Select Counter, where Mr. Kono presides over extended menus that borrow from the kaiseki tradition.
So far, the lending seems more demand driven, by which countries want to borrow from China, than supply driven by a Chinese masterplan.
Without the money, two Toisa companies that borrow from Citibank may face "insufficient liquidity," the shipping company said in court papers on Wednesday.
Of course, if you're going to put something together this derivative, the producers at least have the smarts to borrow from the best.
By getting a cash infusion from Buffett, Occidental could reduce the amount of money it needs to borrow from banks to pay for Anadarko.
The third generation 23X headphones appear to borrow from some of the Bose comfort perks, namely that cushy headband and the bigger ear cups.
The momager has been known to borrow from Kardashian West's closet, so it was no surprise that Kris was placed high in the ranking.
What Happened to Monday seems to borrow from Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game and Margaret Patterson's Shadow Children series to name just a couple.
Consequently, bond dealers and other market players are unable to borrow JGBs from other participants, forcing many of them to borrow from the BOJ.
Broadly, I like to borrow from Steve Jobs in thinking about design not so much as what things look like but how they work.
Most investors prefer to play it safe, which partly explains their willingness to fund startups like Rocket Internet that borrow from proven business models.
But one type of stock-market leverage is measured: "margin debt" - the amount individual and institutional investors borrow from their brokers against their portfolios.
To refinance that debt in a period of higher bond yields, the government would have to borrow from the market at much higher rates.
The conservative looks fondly to the past not as a paradise to return to but as a treasure trove of experience to borrow from.
Its artists often borrow from the idioms of black culture, but in a way that's increasingly detached from the music's originating streets and struggles.
However, there are elements of the redesigned Trip Experiences that do appear borrow from world of ad tech, as well as Facebook's app platform.
Only a small amount of aid comes through since the roads are blocked so most people borrow from others or beg on the streets.
Here are some questions and answers about emergency funds and retirement savings: Is it always a bad idea to borrow from my retirement account?
The residents of the only known inhabited planet in the universe would "know the place for the first time" (to borrow from T.S. Eliot).
The "deleveraging" campaign, which makes it harder for corporations to borrow from banks, will prevent more bad loans piling up in the banking system.
We might borrow from a song and say that Jackson is a lover, not a fighter, but the fight always hovers in the background.
To borrow from Lady Gaga, Ms. Russell's performance remains comfortably "in the shallow," instead of in the deep end into which Anna is plunged.
Without those changes, the program is likely to burn through its next allocation and have no choice but to borrow from the taxpayers again.
My favorite avenue is the Libby app from Overdrive, which gives me access to all the ebooks I can borrow from my local library.
Those jaws are not just the ocean's utmost bones (to borrow from Melville) but the utmost bones in the history of life on Earth.
If President Trump and his people want to do "huge" things (to borrow from his vocabulary), they are going to have to pass legislation.
Now the music industry, social media and the influence industry at large are racing to adapt for, and borrow from, such overnight success stories.
The new scheme will allow wealthier borrowers with market access that continue to borrow from the lender to contribute more to ADB's capital resources.
" This spring, the V&A Museum of Childhood in London will borrow from Dr. Seville for the exhibition "Game Plan: 500 Years of Board Games.
She tried to borrow from the national painting and sculpture museums in Istanbul and Ankara, but was told they were closed for inventories, she said.
The vocals—a dry, bitter croak—are pure, tortured black metal writ slow, while the sonorous, complex riffs borrow from the darkest of death metal.
In principle, it makes sense for a developing country to borrow from abroad to invest in infrastructure that will eventually improve productivity and diversify exports.
Additionally, the margin loan rate investors pay to borrow from the brokerage also generally go up in line with the rising interest rates, he said.
Here's a tip you can borrow from president-elect Donald Trump's playbook: Give your money to the U.S. Treasury to pay down the national debt.
He has shared at least two other photos in the past six months that borrow from the slogans and font style of the television series.
But given how much the rest of the tech industry loves to borrow from Snapchat, it wouldn't be a surprise to see this go further.
Many borrow from Trump's anti-establishment playbook and hope for his support in tough primaries; others hope he keeps his distance, especially in the fall.
I usually either read books that my mom, also an avid reader (and a librarian), loans me or that I borrow from the local library.
At their core, banks turn profits by lending money at a higher interest rate than at which they borrow from depositors or other financial firms.
Some of these tools borrow from organizational psychology, for example, and apply new technologies that can analyze conversations, decisions, and other observable forms of behavior.
At this stage, it was unclear if the scheme would borrow from the San Jose Accord, or be an entirely new mechanism, the sources said.
In the worst of scenarios, you'll borrow from your retirement plan, fail to repay it and end up with your finances in even worse shape.
To borrow from Blazing's analogy, LDL is like a truck that transports cholesterol from your liver to the cells of your body via your blood.
It was a miniature food pantry, modeled after Little Free Libraries, those boxes full of books in people's front yards that others can borrow from.
Moody's pointed to a law Illinois passed in 2009 allowing it to borrow from its GO bond retirement and interest fund to pay Medicaid providers.
To borrow from Irving Berlin, there was nothing Beto O'Rourke did that Stacey Abrams didn't do better in her historic campaign for governor of Georgia.
Some fintechs have risen to prominence by offering loans at a lower interest rate to customers who might be unable to borrow from traditional banks.
Theater, for example, is definitely starting to borrow from the interactive gaming, while there's a lot that games can learn from creating more theatrical experiences.
One program allows banks to borrow from the Bank of England at or very close to its main interest rate for up to four years.
Rather than trying to isolate, borrow from or govern together with a populist radical-right insurgency, a center-right party actually turns itself into one.
More from Retire Well You can collect on your ex's Social Security Is it ever a good idea to borrow from your 401(k) plan?
Asking people to borrow from their retirements – their Social Security funds – to take family and medical leave would harm retirees today and devastate workers tomorrow.
For example, if a participant has an account balance of $40,000, the maximum amount that he or she can borrow from the account is $20,000.
It was a boon to millions of merchants who otherwise would not be able to borrow from traditional financial institutions because they lacked banking history.
Venezuela's dire fiscal situation represents a success of U.S. sanctions, which deny Maduro the ability to borrow from U.S. investors to prop up his government.
So the company arranges for its United States operations to borrow from the foreign parent company large amounts of money, on which it will pay interest.
Over the course of that Tuesday, my video regimen consisted of YouTube, Twitch, and the lower-tier ad-supported Hulu membership I borrow from a friend.
I hate to borrow from a fictional version of Mark Zuckerberg, but if we were going to solve climate change, we would have solved climate change.
Better still, it makes every effort to borrow from the Fast series' latter-day push for more diverse heroes, something the action genre needs right now.
His attorney, Sean Chapman, told the Arizona Daily Star that the 37-year-old will borrow from his retirement fund to help pay the substantial reparations.
Notionally, it is the rate at which banks can borrow from each other, for up to a year, in dollars, sterling, Swiss francs, yen and euros.
In the repo market, Wall Street dealers borrow from money market funds and other investors and pledge their Treasuries and other securities they own as collateral.
The mayor is happy to borrow from foreign counterparts -- he hopes to install a cycle bridge inspired by Copenhagen - but also wishes to set the pace.
With that in mind, will Moss let her daughter Lila, who recently — and quite controversially — began following in her mother's footsteps, borrow from her covetable collection?
Morgan Stanley notes that elsewhere, spikes in the rates at which banks say they'll borrow from each other have been associated with sharp declines in equities.
Of course, there are ways to borrow from other cultures without engaging in theft—think of RZA and Wu-Tang Clan's homage to martial arts films.
The interest rate on secured general collateral repurchases, in which banks and dealers use Treasuries as collateral to borrow from investors, is of a comparable size.
It's almost like the further away we get from the '90s, the more we borrow from the decade's beauty database... and we're not mad at it.
The central bank has closed off some of its funding taps, forcing banks to borrow from its costlier "late liquidity window" to drive up borrowing costs.
After the repo rate rose to 10%, the federal-funds rate, at which banks can borrow from each other, climbed above the Fed's target (see chart).
Some bankers say they hold more cash than legally required because they fear that miscalculating and having to borrow from the Fed would damage their reputations.
Interest rates on infrastructure bank loans would have to be below the state and local rate in order to entice them to borrow from the bank.
Teammates turn to Green, a first-time All-Star selection this season, to rely on his playmaking and to borrow from his bottomless well of emotion.
Of 826 payday loan borrowers that Pew surveyed, 81 percent said they would prefer to borrow from a bank or credit union over a payday lender.
Petrobras will refinance a heavy repayment calendar through 2020 and is set to borrow from state development lender BNDES for the first time in several years.
"You are going to have to borrow from Peter to pay Paul," said Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at the Oil Price Information Service.
So well that she and her stylists felt confident to borrow from black culture—in particular bandanas, braids and slick baby hairs—to parlay her rebellion.
Ms. De Keersmaeker plays with gravity and buoyancy in her passages, which borrow from hip-hop, martial arts and house along with her own contemporary vocabulary.
U.S. companies can issue debt at lower rates than they can borrow from banks because investors know that they have the option of selling the obligation.
By raising its benchmark rate, banks will have to pay more to borrow from the Fed – and guess who the banks will pass those costs onto?
Frese said the company has looked at various sensor technologies for the FireHerc that borrow from the defense company's knowledge of its fighter and missile programs.
For millennials (and old millennials), puka shells became prominent in the '903s and very early aughts, the style of which the aforementioned VSCO hugely borrow from.
He added that the university is not legally allowed to limit how much money graduate students borrow from federal loan programs to pay for living expenses.
The azurite blue used in "Color 2328" cost the equivalent of $2500,20153, a large sum that Murakami was somehow able to borrow from an art supply company.
"If you need to borrow from your retirement savings for a purchase, it could be a sign that you are not living within your means," Keckler said.
Schager points to specific cinematic flourishes that intentionally borrow from games, and yes, in these ways — POV and slow-mo action — films can resemble certain video games.
DUSHANBE (Reuters) - Tajikistan has chosen not to borrow from the World Bank to finance the construction of the Rogun hydroelectric power plant, a bank executive told Reuters.
Zimbabwe has not been able to borrow from international lenders since 1999 when it started defaulting on its debt, and has $1.75 billion rand in foreign arrears.
For some workers, a 22018(k) plan loan seems like a perfect way to access money: You borrow from your own account and repay yourself with interest.
So when love strikes Connie and Tristan, as it inevitably does, they have to wonder if this is indeed, to borrow from Tom Stoppard, the real thing.
NSF and Provident operate in the closely scrutinised subprime sector, providing short term loans to low income people who might otherwise struggle to borrow from mainstream banks.
And while that's excellent company to keep, Hope Downs proves there's far more to Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever than a desire to borrow from their Antipodean forefathers.
I would like to hear what both Sanders and Warren think should be done about this "pointillist empire" (a term I borrow from the historian Daniel Immerwahr).
More unnerving, conservatives too -- the kind that, in post-war Europe, had functioned as a firewall between the far right and liberal democracy -- borrow from Orban's playbook.
"These proposals would ask families to have their current self borrow from their future self," said Vicki Shabo, senior fellow on paid leave strategy at New America.
Now, to plan for the next two, they may tap into their home equity, take out a loan through a state program or borrow from retirement savings.
My first trip was before Kindles, so I had to carry books and top up with what I could buy or borrow from hostels along the way.
A personal loan is money you borrow from a bank, credit union, or an online lender that you repay with interest over a set period of time.
A Fed standing repo facility would reduce banks' preference to hang on to their reserves because they could borrow from the central bank with Treasuries as collateral.
For instance, some CCP customers, such as pension funds, borrow from banks to raise collateral, or "margin," collected by the CCPs to reduce exposure to market turmoil.
Turned away by the banks, they are forced to borrow from non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), or even relatives and friends, at often-punitive rates of interest.
The three trustees, Bill and Melinda Gates, and Warren Buffett — two of them titans of corporate America — wanted to borrow from and work with the private sector.
Instead of covering the walls with students' art, they're covered with test-taking advice ("BATS: Borrow from the question, Answer the question, use Text supports, Stretch the formula").
A pre-approval analyzes your creditworthiness, tells you how much you can borrow from your lender and, ultimately, can make the difference between winning a bid or not.
Now, Ross is downplaying the economic effect the 800,000 federal workers have while on furlough, saying they should borrow from a bank or credit union for money instead.
It's good to see Twitter respond to the criticism it's received over the years, and it's an approach more platform companies, like Instagram for example, could borrow from.
They often sell on housing loans to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, two government-owned giants, and their corporate clients often sell bonds rather than borrow from banks.
One feature of this type of tax-advantaged retirement account that some financial advisors think should be scrapped is the ability to borrow from it under certain circumstances.
P2P lenders, which allow consumers and small businesses to borrow from investors online, emerged in response to a contraction in bank lending following the financial crisis of 2008.
They did this very vaudevillian, Broadway, musical theater, borscht belt style, which here and there, Seth and I borrow from but we don't lean into that as much.
They would be forced to borrow from friends of family, to sell something, to go to a payday loan company or to add to their credit card debt.
To borrow from Mr. Trump, I'm calling for a total and complete shutdown of all analysis of state polling until we can figure out what is going on.
A preapproval analyzes your creditworthiness, tells you how much you can borrow from your lender and ultimately, can make all the difference between winning a bid or not.
From Leimbach: Recommended solutions included improved access and less stigma to vocational education, plus public-private apprentice programs that borrow from what is seen in many European countries.
The bank said on Monday that the Benghazi government could not continue to borrow from the bank and should seek alternative sources of funding to finance the budget.
It was a foolish, even silly gesture — although I don't remember how much, I'm sure I had to borrow from a friend just to get back to Minnesota.
But, in actuality, those (and most others) borrow from the same established humor techniques used in film or TV — delivering jokes almost exclusively through dialogue, text, or cutscenes.
Asian e-commerce and mobile payments models are other sectors that Latin American companies can borrow from, he says, stressing that Latin America features a very social culture.
But the government has not specified how much money it was looking to borrow from the World Bank, saying only that it aimed to raise $5 billion abroad.
Modern baseball has had almost none of that sort of diversity to borrow from: Japan, Korea, Latin America and the minor leagues all play essentially the same game.
Most of them borrow from the style of the lurid Italian films called giallos: Cult-picture aficionados will be tipped off by the bright yellow hotel-room phone.
Electronic music and pop borrow from each other all the time, but there's something different about the scope of underground producers that Rihanna has captivated over the years.
The Orlando shooting bolstered ongoing efforts by the gun control movement to borrow from the same-sex marriage playbook: take the fight to the states and build grassroots support.
It is a plodding and at times inexplicably fake-looking film that sells itself entirely on whatever interest it can borrow from its stars and its famous source material.
Climate lawsuits should borrow from legal models that held tobacco firms liable for health damage from smoking, he said, predicting a rise in class actions targeting major oil firms.
The Federal Reserve dropped the rate it sets for banks to borrow from each other to near zero amid the financial crisis, and left it there for seven years.
Employers can also borrow from bystander intervention programs developed to fight sexual assault, encouraging employees to report harassment they witness even if it didn't happen to them, Dougherty said.
"Their checks bounce, they can't borrow from the capital markets, and then the government can't keep the lights on," said one House Democratic aide about the potential nightmare scenario.
But all the hubbub around this "reinvention," to borrow from the Times, makes me wonder if everyone's fully aware of how dark A Series of Unfortunate Events truly is.
Public-sector banks have turned away from small and marginal farmers since the late 2440.1s, forcing them to borrow from lenders who charge upward of 222 percent annual interest.
Since Strache's election, the Freedom Party has also been helped along by its ideologically fluidity — its willingness to borrow from Left and Right, as it suits the political moment.
Even trade negotiations borrow from the game's lingo, with completed deals being described as "slam dunks," sometimes been completed in a "buzzer beater" style at the last possible moment.
But one thing I wish they would borrow from broadcast networks is the idea of releasing episodes, if not one at a time, at least not all at once.
While governments, particularly in oil-producing countries, have begun to borrow from the international bond market to plug budget deficits, companies are also tapping debt markets to fund expansion.
Some Republicans are considering legislation that would allow people to borrow from their future Social Security benefits to pay for time off from work after they have a baby.
A better and more efficient option would be to borrow from our system of taxation and base the percentage of income that borrowers repay on how much they make.
To wit: To say they're tried-and-true is a bit of an understatement, since most borrow from historic beauty practices, however, the newest versions are far from antiquated.
That's partially as a way to borrow from those cars' notoriety, but the thinking and engineering underpinning the new E-Hybrid is indeed based on the successful 918 formula.
There are countless scenarios in which you might need a tool kit in adulthood, and it's best to buy your own so you don't have to borrow from friends.
The insurance, which generally guarantees about 90 percent of the value of the receivables, essentially stripping out the profit, can help entrepreneurs increase what they can borrow from banks.
An answer to this problem is to borrow from the models developed in global health, climate finance, and social impact bonds, which have harnessed private finance for public good.
A pre-approval analyzes your creditworthiness, tells you how much you can borrow from your lender and, ultimately, can make all the difference between winning a bid or not.
Alfirman said the government would also use carryover cash from 2019 of 136 trillion rupiah ($8.55 billion) and might borrow from multilateral banks to cover for the widening deficit.
While Picasso is celebrated for his quotations from African sculpture and pre-classical Iberian art, indigenous artists are dismissed as derivative or imitative when they borrow from European art.
After spending 10 years at Johnson & Johnson I can tell you that product development and other innovations really can borrow from some of the key wins out here. Absolutely.
Why is the paper of so called record putting unfounded claims to borrow, from their language, of defense for Biden which are easily proven false by their own reporting.
Primary dealers, or the top 24 Wall Street firms that do business directly with Fed, borrow from the central bank by using their Treasuries and other bonds as collateral.
We then borrow from Mr. Graff and Ms. Birkenstein's strategy "They Say/I Say" to help students to engage with the ideas in each new article they have read.
From an early age, I've liked to have five books on the go at a time — that was the maximum number one could borrow from the Ayr Public Library.
You might not have hit your 10-minute goal, but your body still smells worse than the hand-me-down sweatpants you had to borrow from the lost and found.
When preparing to buy bigger things, we'd also set aside that money in a separate savings account, which Jeff would borrow from to invest when he saw a promising stock.
Alternatively, Maraffino suggested allowing only banks that deposited more at the ECB than they borrow from it to have access to the tiered rate, thus eliminating arbitrage opportunities for others.
To borrow from a Carole King song, that's because the streaming service has recognized that even if something like "Gilmore Girls" isn't a showstopper, where it leads, we will follow.
Ventura, along with fellow AWA wrestler Hulk Hogan, would also later "borrow" from 1970s wrestler "Superstar" Billy Graham, who "borrowed" from Ali, who "borrowed" from Gorgeous George, and so on.
Degot, and co-curator David Riff, borrow from a 1933 short story by Russian Philosopher Georg Lukács to set the scene (the story, too, is called "The Grand Hotel Abyss").
They sell most mortgages to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, two government-owned entities, whereas European lenders keep them on the books; American companies borrow from markets rather than banks.
Regardless of whether TVD writers decide to borrow from Wesley and Somerhalder's perfect ending, there's one thing that the show needs to do first: get Damon and Elena back together.
But it is unclear how this will work in practice given that smaller European companies tend to borrow from banks rather than on the market, or they are junk-rated.
A lower credit rating means the borrower usually has to pay more to borrow from investors and can reduce the value of its existing debt, forcing some holders to sell.
She at first depicted Manafort's rise to riches, but Washkuhn ended her testimony with grim details of his financial collapse and desperate efforts to borrow from banks to stay afloat.
In the 19th century, and in 1929, the only protections that banks had against failures were their own balance sheets and what they could borrow from other bank balance sheets.
To borrow from the actress Viola Davis, diversity "is not a hashtag" to be celebrated when recruiting poor students and put on the back burner once they are on campus.
Hoping to maintain the flow of credit to the economy, it also offered to effectively pay banks to borrow from it and lend that money on to the real economy.
These are no sword fights; instead, under the movement direction of Orlando Pabotoy and Kimiye Corwin, the actors borrow from martial arts, wielding long bo staffs and short eskrima sticks.
Parents and students must show credit-worthiness to borrow from that program and the interest rate -- currently set at 7.6% -- is typically higher than the loans from other federal programs.
The bank's actions drove lenders to borrow from its discount window to cover their position after overnight rates hit 53 percent at Friday's open before falling back to 19 percent.
If you're in a tough spot and need to borrow from your credit card issuer, try to do so with a card that has a no-interest period on purchases.
"We are not doing our children any favors when we borrow from their future in order to invest in systems and policies that are not yielding better results," DeVos said.
Not only did the very basis of my scenario borrow from the game (an abandoned space-station once owned by an evil corporation), but also the campaign's main centerpiece; Minerva.
It's not uncommon for tech companies to borrow from classic sci-fi, but this video is such an obvious copy of 2001's theme that we had to call it out.
Some of tools now being used in the financial industry borrow from organizational psychology, for example, and apply new technologies that can analyze conversations, decisions, and other observable forms of behavior.
The Emoji Movie isn't made by Miller and Lord, and that is immediately obvious from the trailer, which appears to superficially borrow from their work without quite getting its deeper appeal.
If you're old like me and didn't know that you could borrow ebooks, well you can, and many libraries across the US have a digital collection that you can borrow from.
Then there's the highly anticipated sequel to Black Panther, which could easily borrow from the classic comics storyline where Shuri rises as the new Black Panther and/or Queen of Wakanda.
One workaround is for the old to "borrow" from the young on the understanding that the young will eventually be "repaid", when they themselves grow frail, by the as yet unborn.
Chauvinists in both countries borrow from the anti-Muslim tirades of Hindu nationalists in India, whose constant drumbeat of incitement gives rise to an equally constant stream of ugly sectarian incidents.
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - The European Central Bank is tightening regulations to prevent banks from pledging some riskier forms of collateral when they borrow from euro zone central banks, it said on Thursday.
That's because TV manufactures and titans like Comcast and Amazon are looking to borrow from the Roku playbook, while locking up market share — and maybe freezing Roku out in the process.
With the bar for borrowing low and advertising exaggerated, some people are likely to "blindly borrow" from those platforms, resulting in a large number of subprime loans, according to the commentary.
"Larry had an awful lot of originality that colleagues never thought about, wasn't one to borrow from others, and shared the information he found," Professor King said in a phone interview.
But if, in the midst of life, we are in death, it is also true here (to borrow from James Joyce) that in the midst of death, we are in life.
To finance the purchase, the college needed to borrow from a bank and obtain additional financing from the diocese, according to David V. Dunn, a Burlington College trustee at the time.
To borrow from Oscar Wilde, it would take a heart of stone to contemplate this tale without some laughter — enough to easily justify casting comic actors in all the different parts.
This is not the kind of cash that chefs normally keep stashed in an apron pocket next to the meat thermometer, so they borrow from family, friends, banks or other investors.
Whether you're trying to prevent littering or encourage people to return the books they borrow from the office library, it helps to give people the impression that they're being watched. 19913.
In this context, Lawson's work is an exemplar, to borrow from Audre Lorde, of "biomythography", an embodied strategy of narration that exists at the meeting place of biography, history and myth.
Meanwhile, the ECB agreed to lower the amount of emergency liquidity assistance that Greek banks could borrow from the domestic central bank by 1.4 billion euros to 57.2 billion euros on Thursday.
That means Russian companies cannot borrow from the EU and the U.S. banks and on markets for more than 30 days, limiting oil producers such as Rosneft from raising funds for investment.
If you're wondering what Moore could possibly borrow from Rajneeshpuram for a casual weekend away, it's worth noting that one prominent feature of this commune was their bright orange and red attire.
That doesn't mean "Batwoman" is beyond hope, only that the series doesn't exactly hit the ground running, and appears short on arrows in its quiver, to borrow from another DC-CW staple.
The ECB on Thursday ruled out raising interest rates in the next year and offered to effectively pay banks to borrow from it and lend that money on to the real economy.
Parents would still bear the cost of taking time off, but the bill would allow them to access some of their Social Security income early — essentially, to borrow from their future selves.
Italian banks were still paying the same, deeply negative interest rate - in other words, getting paid - to borrow from their peers against collateral, now the most common form of lending between banks.
Bon Appétit recently found out the hard way that a lot of people are a bit stubborn when it comes to totally weird food concepts, especially when they borrow from existing ones.
The bank could in theory make the interest rate on borrowing under the TLS negative, thus paying banks to borrow from it and subsidising lending to ordinary Britons, Mr Wren-Lewis says.
For example, store owners can borrow from his financial technology group, Ant Financial, while shoppers can "smile to pay" with an Ant app or try on clothes on an AR-powered mirror.
The investigation centered on the panel of banks that made daily submissions to help set Libor, an average of how much those banks said they would pay to borrow from one another.
One of the sources said the bank held 3.5 billion euros in assets it could use as collateral to borrow from the European Central Bank, up from 2.7 billion euros in January.
These are big costs for us; at times, we had to borrow from family or retirement funds, or use proceeds from the sale of the house we gave up in the divorce.
Unlike banks, which take deposits and borrow from the government, private equity firms invest money from wealthy individuals and pension funds desperate for returns at a time of historically low interest rates.
For a lot of folks, poetry makes nothing happen (to borrow from W. H. Auden) aside from causing verse-dodgers to feel guilty for running far away from it after high school.
Hailee Steinfeld straps on the corset for the role that finds the burgeoning poet in her much-beloved mid-1800s Amherst, Massachusetts, but the soundtrack, dialogue, and twerking borrow from modern times.
The Saudi government has also seen its cash reserves decline to $623 billion from $732 billion, and for the first time the country has been forced to borrow from international bond markets.
For companies, the short-term debt they borrow from investors through prime money market funds may serve as an important source of cash flow to cover operations, such as payroll, Hennessy said.
As I detail in my last book, the tax revenues of local governments have not kept pace with their social expenditures, prompting those authorities to borrow from banks to fund public services.
One of Mr. Manafort's accountants, Cindy LaPorta, testified at trial that she had knowingly misrepresented his income and real estate holdings to Mr. Fallarino to help her client borrow from Citizens Bank.
Unlike Hindu motifs, which borrow from the natural world, Muslim motifs are not representational, and Ajrakh is densely patterned with geometrics usually in the blues of indigo and rusty reds of madder.
Whether an individual should borrow from one asset to invest in another seems to depend on their individual financial situation, age and goals, says Lyn Alden, founder of Lyn Alden Investment Strategy.
BEIJING, Nov 15 (Reuters) - China's Shenzhen city will raise downpayment level to 70 percent for second-home buyers who borrow from the housing provident fund to finance their homes, effective from Nov.
The central bank has cut off some funding taps to force lenders to borrow from its costlier "late liquidity window", a facility designed for banks who need a lender of last resort.
Even if you take a loan that you plan to pay back, the pre-tax money you borrow from your 401(k) will ultimately have to be repaid using after-tax dollars.
The biggest thing I borrow from what he does is, when you read a Grant Morrison comic, per page you get more ideas than sometimes in a whole issue or graphic novel.
Cisse said the government planned to ask donors for help bridging the 257 billion CFA franc deficit - Mali's usual mode of funding that gap - and would also look to borrow from capital markets.
Under the terms of the scheme, banks can borrow from the BoE at a rate close to its benchmark rate, as long as they maintain or expand net lending to businesses and households.
BlackRock portfolio managers will be allowed to borrow from their peers if they are pressed for money to cash out clients, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission officials said in a notice on Tuesday.
The new protocols are called the Hartford Consensus, which borrow from war zone training to teach first responders how to pack wounds and apply tourniquets, with a focus on stopping massive bleeding quickly.
Some of them suggest the DIY, polyglot pop Grimes mastered last year with Art Angels, and others borrow from all over the place — to hip-hop, to Afrobeat, to jazz, to R&B.
Many American auto loan borrowers have high credit scores and are able to borrow from stable lenders like credit unions — and there are more people taking out these loans, according to the Fed.
Under the system, a euro zone member facing an economic crisis that leads to massive job losses and a heavy burden on its social-security system could borrow from a joint reinsurance fund.
TARGET2, a payments system used to settle accounts between national central banks and the ECB, also acted as a buffer, enabling central banks in the crisis countries in effect to borrow from others.
It's finding $85033 billion to borrow from China, or Russian money from Deutsche Bank, to build a fence/wall that few think will work to keep illegal border-crossers from crossing the border.
This could be followed by accords that borrow from the 2007, 2005 and 1994 nuclear agreements, and the unfinalized 2000 missile deal, which froze and rolled back North Korea's nuclear and missile programs.
I MEAN, THE BIGGEST RISK IS MR. AND MS. REGULATOR ARE GOING TO COME OUT AND SAY, LOOK, WHAT WE'VE GOT TOO MANY STORIES OF PEOPLE STARTING TO BORROW FROM THEIR CREDIT CARD.
Those models may not translate from one market to the other, but the two can still borrow from each other, said Carmen Chang, a partner at the venture capital firm New Enterprise Associates.
This was discrimination, but it was also patronage: It was a time when "affirmative action was white," to borrow from the historian Ira Katznelson, lifting white workers at the expense of African-Americans.
Instead, the winning candidate might borrow from the success of participatory public budgeting in cities across the country or to the 2013 mayoral transition of Bill de Blasio (D) in New York City.
The package seeks to change this by giving banks more flexibility to lend to companies and each other and to borrow from abroad, and by stimulating activity in an undeveloped interbank money market.
Because of the stigma attached to PED usage, Rodriguez has placed himself outside of baseball's continuity; he is, to borrow from Silver Age comic-book blurbs, a dream, a hoax, an imaginary story.
Swift swerves between the sounds of today's pop, hip-hop, and trap, but doesn't do it that well, though some critics, puzzlingly, call it innovative to distill (borrow) from today's sounds so effectively.
This was cultural appropriation in its earliest, positive sense, as used by sociologists in the 1970s to identify how groups outside the mainstream borrow from the presiding culture and make it their own.
Though they borrow from the history of an era long gone to create original compositions, the musicians of Orquesta Akokán — led by vocalist Jose Gomez, known as Pepito — still sound fresh and jubilant.
Robert Hunter, a former NFIP risk manager and Texas insurance regulator, said reinsurance makes "no sense" for FEMA, which can borrow from the Treasury at low interest rates set by the federal government.
A "junk" credit rating means the state is at a higher risk of not repaying its debt, which would make it difficult for the state to borrow from investors at low interest rates.
"I admit that at first I thought it might be a little strange to borrow from a model of a single person's emotional turmoil to explain the evolution of entire societies," he wrote.
And, to borrow from his description of Mattis, he is "a badass" who eventually offended his hero and won a pre-publication battle with the Pentagon over the release of Holding the Line.
Washington has a history of budgetary magic tricks — move money around enough, borrow from this to pay that, and it is hard to keep track of spending and easy to claim fiscal victory.
Users who are looking to borrow from MoneyLion can now get a loan approved in as little as 15 seconds, and can have funds in their account as quickly as the same business day.
Mr Nadal could be forgiven if he elects to borrow from Mr Federer's playbook and sit out a couple of months while the tour moves to his less-preferred surfaces, hard and grass courts.
U.S. companies and consumers would lose access to China's low-cost workers and cheap Chinese imports while Washington would be unable to borrow from China, which holds more U.S. debt than any other country.
Under the junta that isolated Myanmar for decades, farmers had to borrow from the MADB, which was permitted only to make small loans for rice seed, rarely for periods of longer than a year.
The Dress Shop has a slew of outfits and extras that borrow from imagery taken from The Enchanted Tiki Room, The Haunted Mansion, It's A Small World, and The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror.
He said small businesses - often seen as the engine of the British economy - are becoming increasingly reluctant to borrow from traditional lenders, even it means crimping their business prospects and limiting overall economic growth.
NEW YORK (Reuters) - BlackRock Inc portfolio managers will be allowed to borrow from their peers if they are pressed for money to cash out clients, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission officials said on Tuesday.
I thought I'd have to leave the Midwest to find all that — but I only found my heart's desire, to borrow from another famous Midwestern story, when I came back to my own backyard.
Because the central government places tight limits on local-government debts, provinces and cities have long used arm's length companies, known as local-government financing vehicles (LGFVs), to borrow from banks and issue bonds.
In an attempt to save the bank, Mr. Gulen asked his followers to deposit their money in the bank, and also to borrow from other banks and invest that money in the movement's bank.
ANKARA, Feb 1 (Reuters) - It is "very clear" that Turkey does not need to borrow from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), given the country's current economic performance, the Turkish Finance Ministry said on Friday.
To borrow from the Passover Seder: If Freddy Mayer had merely escaped Nazi Germany as a teenager, then enlisted in the United States Army and gone back to fight, it would have been enough.
And should it for some reason need the money in its main purse compartment, it itself can borrow from third parties against these profits, explicitly mortgaging up to 2/3rds of its Scrapple stock.
The once-in-a-generation financial meltdown and economic catastrophe was so grave that, to borrow from ECB chief Mario Draghi, they will do whatever it takes to make sure it does not happen again.
Sudan sorely needs a financial lifeline from donors but it is unable to borrow from the IMF after failing to pay back previous loans and efforts to reschedule debts it owes other countries have faltered.
Yet these measures are crucial for Greece to reach a sizeable primary surplus in 2018, when lenders hope it will be able to manage its own finances and borrow from the market at sustainable rates.
It also has a youth unemployment problem, which then leads to all kinds of political and social issues, so all that requires growth, innovation, and the ability of companies to borrow, and borrow from banks.
As many Spanish towns are not permitted to borrow from banks, a lot of the work, such as revamping public lighting to run on clean power, has to be done with public money, she said.
Also supporting the market, margin financing — money investors borrow from brokerages to purchase stocks — has risen in the past two weeks to the highest level this year, according to UBS Securities, reflecting improving risk appetite.
Those that raise their lending above a certain target will be paid as much as 0.4% to borrow from the ECB, with the precise rate depending on how liberally they splash the ECB's money around.
"Winter's War," which also seemed to borrow from "Frozen," took in a dismal $9013 million at North American cinemas, or 64 percent less than its series predecessor, "Snow White and the Huntsman," collected in 2012.
Written in 10 movements that alternate sustained resonance with sharp-edged rhythms, it is full of expressive "recitatives for glass bottles and heartfelt arias for metal pipes," to borrow from Mr. Sliwinski's eloquent program notes.
In a charging document, the United States Justice Department accused Mr. Curtler of engaging in a conspiracy to manipulate Libor, the average rate at which banks can borrow from one another, from 2003 to 2011.
These jumps in interest rates for banks and Wall Street to borrow from one another could disrupt the broader financial markets if they cannot raise enough cash to fund trades or to meet regulatory requirements.
The rate was determined by a pared-down average of submissions from a self-selected, self-policing committee of banks based on their estimates of how much they would pay to borrow from each other.
There isn't anything to make great again (to unavoidably borrow from the bewildering moment we are living in) because it hasn't ever been that great and I agree there's something weirdly and abidingly hopeful there.
The rationale, said a Chase spokesman, Michael Fusco, is that if customers overspend and borrow from a credit card or a line of credit to cover the shortfall, they may end up paying significant interest.
To borrow from his cricketing legacy, he is going to have to hit a few boundaries before he can turn to Trump's demands, and by all accounts he'll need the military's help to do it.
Payday borrowers typically have checking accounts — they must show regular deposits as collateral for the loans — and many say they would prefer to borrow from their own bank if they could qualify, Mr. Horowitz said.
Its creation was partly inspired by the collective therapeutic rituals she observed as child, and its visuals — like the campy, 1980s-prom-indebted montage in the video for "Angels of Sweat" — borrow from tarot iconography.
If a euro zone member faces an economic crisis that leads to massive job losses and a heavy burden on its social-security system, the country could borrow from this joint reinsurance fund, Scholz said.
Previously, central banks set their discount rates  —remember, that's the interest rate central banks charge banks that wish to borrow from them — in order to keep their currencies stable in value vis-à-vis gold.
Everyone knew it wasn't a perfect team, but to borrow from The Little Prince, it was easier to view the Diamondbacks as a boa constrictor capable of digesting an elephant than as a bland hat.
This number is large because graduate school is expensive and, in contrast with loans for undergraduates, there is no hard cap on how much money students can borrow from the federal government for graduate school.
Prosecutors say Manafort was not truthful in his application for the loan, falsely claiming that it was not held as a rental property in order to maximize the amount he could borrow from the bank.
Overnight lending rates rose to around 300 percent from 200 percent at the end of Wednesday, as naira liquidity dried up in the banking system and some banks were forced to borrow from the central bank.
More than 60 black farmers now borrow from Serfontein to buy calves that are raised on Sernick's feed lots around the small town of Edenville, about 180 km (110 miles) south of the commercial capital, Johannesburg.
Gulf governments look set to borrow from the international bond market at a record pace this year as they cover budget deficits — which are expected to near $140 billion, or 11 percent of gross domestic product.
Following that are lessons on the source code of popular frameworks like jQuery and Underscore to help you understand how they interact with JavaScript and how you can learn and borrow from different kinds of code.
Deutsche Bank pays more to borrow from other banks than its peers including stragglers in Greece and Italy, Euribor data showed on Tuesday, a trend that underscores the gravity of the problems facing Germany's flagship lender.
India, the bank's second biggest shareholder after China, is looking to borrow from the AIIB, a senior official said, to back Prime Minister Narendra Modi's plan of expanding installed solar capacity to 22016 gigawatts by 21.
For five currencies and seven maturities, from overnight to 12 months, it is the average, trimmed of outliers, of up to 20 banks' estimates of the interest rate at which they can borrow from other banks.
DUBAI, April 23 (Reuters) - Kuwait's government has given the green light to Kuwait Petroleum Corporation to borrow from various financial institutions to fund investments over the next five years, state news agency KUNA said on Tuesday.
Banks and security dealers borrow from the $2.2 trillion repurchase agreement (repo) market where they pledge a security, typically a Treasury bond, as collateral and agree to buy it back at a set time and price.
EU officials are considering imposing rules to require these primary dealers - the banks appointed by national debt agencies to help them borrow from investors - to have significant operations in the bloc post-Brexit, said the bankers.
Shared disaster management could help the federal program with its mounting debt as subsidized premium rates and several years of catastrophic losses have led to the need for NFIP to borrow from Treasury to pay claims.
Mersch said that lax rules on what collateral banks can use to borrow from the ECB, introduced during the 2010-12 euro zone crisis, should be strengthened and some criteria regulating bond purchases also need changing.
Padding the Coffers My fiancé and I bid on an apartment in the Bronx that requires us to have at least two years of mortgage and maintenance in savings, which we could borrow from a bank.
For sales to sustainably pick up, the government needs to improve the supply and the cost of liquidity for housing finance companies that many need to borrow from, said Manish Jaiswal, CEO of Magma Housing Finance.
We should expect more from games that borrow from real cultures: Games should tackle issues and topics like gender, race, sexuality, and politics, thanks to their ability to embody the player in a world or role.
After a series of corporate bankruptcies in the 1990s and early 2000s left the property business he had inherited from his father largely unable to borrow from mainstream banks, Trump turned to ever more obscure backers.
They looked at the current interest rate in the federal funds market, in which banks borrow from and lend to each other overnight, and compared that with the fed funds rates predicted in the futures markets.
The Fed also announced it would reduce the interest rate charged to banks that borrow from its discount window by 1.50 percentage points to help meet demands for credit from households and businesses at this time.
Created just over 20 years ago by a lobbying group representing the British banking sector, Libor was supposed to reflect the interest rate at which member banks could borrow from one another at any given time.
The American Action Forum last year outlined principles for reform that would help the NFIP run more efficiently, be more effective, and eventually eliminate its continued need to borrow from Treasury to make up for losses.
Over all, Mr. Booker's housing plan is a grab bag of policy proposals that borrow from many of the ideas making their way through state capitols and high-price cities like New York and San Francisco.
There are other elements of the level that borrow from Frank Darabont's classic movie, including the playing of the same The Marriage of Figaro duet over the prison-wide PA while someone's locked in the toilet.
In fact, I predict Trump's presidency will be a reign of moderation, because — to borrow from of one of the many impressive balloons that will float above the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade --Trump is the Pillsbury Doughboy.
The dynamic duo went on to design a number of collaborative collections, the latest of which, titled 1987, is inspired by the 80s- and 90s-era jewelry that Williams would steal borrow from her mother's jewelry box.
"I think Mr. Trump should remove sanctions against the four leading Russian banks," said Kostin, pointing out that the country's banks could not privatize any further or borrow from institutions in the West due to the restrictions.
All the countries piled up debts at home to finance their military effort, but France and especially Britain were also able to borrow from the United States to supplement their resources of food, raw materials and munitions.
"SAIL does not have any cash and bank balance and would need to borrow from the market for payment of dividend," SAIL said in an explanation sent to the government expressing its inability to pay the dividend.
They really hate us kind of thing, not to borrow from Sally Field, but there's a real sense that tech is hurting this country, whether it's addiction, whether it's bullying, whether it's the abuse of these platforms.
The report additionally noted that the fund has for decades had to borrow from a Treasury Department trust fund to break even, and at times has been granted debt forgiveness, which is paid off by taxpayer money.
She said the aid meant Bahrain would remain able to borrow from the international market — something which was called into doubt in March, when Manama scrapped plans to sell U.S. dollar bonds because investors demanded high yields.
It would create a general fund for agencies to borrow from for modernization efforts and would also allow agencies to keep money saved from replacing legacy systems and spend it on future modernization efforts within three years.
By charging banks more to keep deposits at the central bank and less to borrow from it, Mario Draghi, the E.C.B. president, and his colleagues hope to make it less attractive for commercial banks to hoard cash.
Sunac has now paid 15 billion yuan to Wanda Commercial for the tourism projects, Dalian Wanda chairman Wang Jianlin said, adding that Sunac would not borrow from Wanda to complete the deal as had been earlier announced.
By charging banks more to keep deposits at the central bank and less to borrow from it, Mr. Draghi and his colleagues hope to make it less attractive for commercial banks to hoard cash, spurring increased lending.
With no jobs and few opportunities to earn a livelihood, these women - many of whom look after up to four people - are being forced to borrow from money lenders, leaving them open to exploitation by trafficking networks.
He stressed the importance of "liquidity tools" such as other moves the Fed made to lower the discount rate for banks to borrow from the Fed and to provide dollar swap lines with other global central banks.
"To borrow from a long-running riff on the television show The Office, there may well be a difference between one who serves as 'the assistant regional manager' and 'the assistant to the regional manager,'" Moss wrote.
But the varnish doesn't quite disguise the hopeful, bewildered young man he will become as his life — to borrow from F. Scott Fitzgerald, who knew from fame and disenchantment — is borne back ceaselessly into a reproachful past.
In this way, they borrow from the American land-art movement, which was pioneered by artists such as Walter De Maria and Robert Smithson, who wanted to push past the gallery walls and work with natural materials.
Her provocative images borrow from fashion, advertising, burlesque and pornography; push the unpromising 291s trend of Photo Realism into new areas of gorgeousness and abstraction; and explore the ways women do and do not own their bodies.
Her provocative images borrow from fashion, advertising, burlesque and pornography; push the unpromising 1960s trend of Photo Realism into new areas of gorgeousness and abstraction; and explore the ways women do and do not own their bodies.
They have pledged to work together in the next Congress on a realistic set of proposals to address our biggest challenges, proposals that borrow from the best ideas of both sides and violate the principles of neither.
Her provocative images borrow from fashion, advertising, burlesque and pornography; push the unpromising 8733s trend of Photo Realism into new areas of gorgeousness and abstraction; and explore the ways women do and do not own their bodies.
It establishes a $500 million general technology modernization fund that agencies can borrow from in order to transition to new technology, in addition to allowing agencies to set up their own working capital funds for IT projects.
Her provocative images borrow from fashion, advertising, burlesque and pornography; push the unpromising 29700s trend of Photo Realism into new areas of gorgeousness and abstraction; and explore the ways women do and do not own their bodies.
Her provocative images borrow from fashion, advertising, burlesque and pornography; push the unpromising 23s trend of Photo Realism into new areas of gorgeousness and abstraction; and explore the ways women do and do not own their bodies.
It establishes a $2900 million general technology modernization fund that agencies can borrow from in order to transition to new technology, in addition to allowing agencies to set up their own working capital funds for IT projects.
Her provocative images borrow from fashion, advertising, burlesque and pornography; push the unpromising 2250s trend of Photo Realism into new areas of gorgeousness and abstraction; and explore the ways women do and do not own their bodies.
Her provocative images borrow from fashion, advertising, burlesque and pornography; push the unpromising 29s trend of Photo Realism into new areas of gorgeousness and abstraction; and explore the ways women do and do not own their bodies.
When we do, we borrow from current lenders with a promise to pay them back with taxes taken from future generations who were never asked if they'd be willing to lend the money in the first place.
When individuals and companies borrow from lenders in another country, they increasingly borrow in dollars, which now account for 75 percent of these global flows, up from 60 percent just before the global financial crisis in 2008.
It will also let banks borrow from the ECB at rate just 10 basis points above its minus 0.4% deposit rate provided they beat the ECB's lending benchmarks in a new targeted longer-term refinancing operation, or TLTRO.
EditorsNote: update 2: revises 10th paragraph with Rangers' win Monday Islanders respond to coach's critique with a win NEW YORK — To borrow from an old advertising slogan: When Jack Capuano scolds someone publicly, the New York Islanders listen.
In the region, peer-to-peer lending, which allow consumers and small businesses to borrow from investors online, is at a more nascent stage, with lending for businesses still dominated overwhelmingly by banks and other traditional finance providers.
Mr Abe appeared to borrow from the book's brash credo last November: while the rest of the world was still gasping at Mr Trump's election, Mr Abe jumped on a plane and went to meet the president-elect.
The Facebook-owned messaging service is trying to make big group chats easier to manage, and who better to borrow from than the company that "disrupted" how teams communicate (even if that disruption sometimes comes at a cost)?
To borrow from the architect Louis Sullivan, matpakke's form follows its function: The point of these open-faced sandwiches is to provide a quick, easy, somewhat nutritious lunch-time meal that provides sustenance without leaving you too full.
The amount of money in the fund has yet to be set and contributions would be voluntary, the official said, but it would allow countries to borrow from it as long as they repaid at a later date.
"I pretty much ran out of clothes by week three and had to borrow from the rest of the women," says Andi Dorfman who appeared on Juan Pablo's Bachelor before starring in her own season of the Bachelorette.
The company plans to borrow from lenders like the Japan International Cooperation Agency, the Asian Development Bank and China-backed Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, as well as getting funding from the government and private sector loans, Syahbandar said.
Zayn's disdain for One Direction aside, the strategy he employs on Mind of Mine isn't so different from the one the band uses: acknowledge your influences, borrow from them liberally, and paper over the cracks with capable singing.
In a written statement, Adeosun's ministry also said Africa's biggest economy was looking at "options" to borrow from the African Development Bank and export credit agencies such as China Exim Bank "due to their concessionary rates of interest".
Both companies provide short-term loans to consumers who might otherwise struggle to borrow from more mainstream banks, a sector under pressure as lawmakers want to rein in punitive interest rates charged on borrowing by often vulnerable people.
But a spike since March in demand for cash in the markets where banks borrow from one another over short periods has caused the rates the Fed tries to influence to inch closer to breaching that 2.5% threshold.
In a speech billed as a blueprint for stimulating growth and creating jobs, Mr. Trump offered a grab bag of ideas that borrow from discredited supply-side economics, the fossil fuel industry's wish list and "America First" isolationism.
It also lands smack in the middle of a heated and continuing debate in literary circles about appropriation (when members of the dominant culture borrow from a subculture) and assimilation (when the borrowing happens in the other direction).
It's not one of their pop hits, but the way they were able to borrow from different genres and forms and apply those lessons in unexpected ways perhaps demonstrates why they had those hits in the first place.
The state and its capital have long been playgrounds for the ethically challenged, but this year is a "scandal-palooza" of criminal cases, to borrow from Blair Horner, executive director of the New York Public Interest Research Group.
Even as they wrestled with which novel by Mr. Vargas Llosa was the best, they generally agreed on his ability to borrow from popular culture to create art, his vast range of settings and styles — and his talent.
The building is classicizing, with its base and capital, at the same time that those patterns on the facade borrow from ironwork by Southern slaves, and the facade's canted, three-tiered structure derives from West African sculptural traditions.
State-owned enterprises in sectors like steel making and coal mining tend to focus mainly on preserving employment for their workers, no matter how much money they need to borrow from state-controlled banks to cover financial losses.
The two firms provide short-term loans to consumers who might otherwise struggle to borrow from more mainstream banks, a sector under pressure as lawmakers want to rein in punitive interest rates charged on borrowing by often vulnerable people.
Researchers at the University of Tokyo's JSK lab decided to borrow from that behavior to try and improve robotic performance, building a metal frame that could be filled with water which would seep out when it was in motion.
In addition to this, Rome is in talks with the European Central Bank over the prospects of the banks being allowed to use these safest tranches issued by the vehicle as collateral to borrow from the ECB, Rivera said.
The share prices of all five of the listed banks fell on Sunday, with QNB losing 0.5 percent, as investors reacted to the prospect of the banks facing funding difficulties because of reduced ability to borrow from foreign institutions.
NCDs are short-term debt instruments traded in China's interbank market, which are used by smaller banks to borrow from larger lenders, and which have in the past attracted regulatory scrutiny as they were used to fund speculative investments.
Then there's "Neighbors," a self-described "epic with cartoons" about a blackface-wearing black family, and "Appropriate," about a white family with an oppressive past, which seemed to borrow from just about every classic American drama of domestic dysfunction.
The dispute focuses on what the country needs to do to reach a 3.5 percent primary surplus in 2018 and keep it there so that it no longer has to borrow from other euro zone governments to remain solvent.
This would seem to increase the risk, but the lenders say it allows them to know the individuals, monitor the businesses more closely and help the companies get to a point where they can borrow from a traditional bank.
Investors had initially cheered the ECB's announcement that it will cut rates to fresh record lows, start buying corporate debt for the first time and effectively begin paying banks to borrow from it to lend to companies and households.
A possible next step, Bostic said, could be the resumption of other programs rolled out during the 2007 to 2009 financial crisis, such as the Term Auction Facility that broadened the ability of banks to borrow from the Fed.
Although Marvel hasn't confirmed when the show is set or what its source material is, the Bishop and Hawkeye show seems like it will borrow from the 2012 Hawkeye series written by Matt Fraction and drawn by David Aja.
There is something else Mr. Trump should borrow from the Iran deal: a monitoring system that blankets the entire nuclear supply chain — the mines, mills, centrifuge factories and assembly lines as well as the enrichment and reprocessing sites themselves.
A possible next step, Bostic said, could be the resumption of other programs rolled out during the 2007 to 2009 financial crisis, such as the Term Auction Facility that broadened the ability of banks to borrow from the Fed.
Our age appears to have a strong reality hunger (to borrow from David Shields's anti-novel rant), and a certain kind of traditional fiction-making seems to be not hungry enough—fattened on convention, a little lazy with success.
According to the IRS, the maximum you can borrow from your pre-tax retirement account such as a 401k is (1) the greater of $10,000 or 50 percent of your vested account balance, or (153) $50,000, whichever is less.
We must recognize these climatically destabilizing trends as bundled violences, (to borrow from Rebecca Solnit) — for while they are anthropogenic, the people most responsible for generating the conditions for these violences often bear the least weight of the repercussions.
But far from coming from a place of ignorance and disrespect, these Japanese women do their best to engage with, learn from, and pay respect to (in the form of props and actual financial support) the culture they borrow from.
In such cases, the bonds of secular stagnation may temporarily be broken by a period of financial excess in which bubble conditions drive speculative investment, or in which groups short of purchasing power borrow from those with savings to spare.
Designed to reflect the cost at which banks can borrow from each other in different currencies over varying time frames, rates such as Euribor and the London interbank offered rate (Libor) are benchmarks for about $450 trillion of financial products.
Matsui expected the BOJ would opt for some combination of cutting interest rates deeper into negative territory, offering banks the ability to borrow from the central bank at negative rates and augmenting its existing exchange traded fund (ETF) purchase program.
China alone has a middle class of 600 million people, and they have an "absurd" amount of savings, to borrow from Naval Ravikant, cofounder of AngelList, a seed-stage platform that's a prominent beneficiary of foreign financial interest in U.S. companies.
Most borrow from friends or family, but an astonishing 25m out of about 37m adult South Africans owe money to financial institutions or other corporate lenders (such as utilities or shops that allow them to buy now and pay later).
One way she is dealing with that is to borrow from the world of telecoms by creating a multichannel fibre with a width of 100 microns (one micron is a millionth of a metre), about the same as a human hair.
Two regional lenders, the Bank of Jinzhou and Great Wall West China Bank, had difficulties issuing negotiable certificates of deposit, which are short-term debt instruments traded in China's interbank market and used by smaller banks to borrow from larger lenders.
It seems as though mainstream culture has (finally — finally) begun to realize what we have known forever — that Black women are not only a minority group with an aesthetic and traditions to borrow from, but the backbone of popular culture.
In contrast, OPEC's Gulf Arab members — Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Qatar — have very few joint ventures with oil companies, do not have pre-payment deals with China and do not need to borrow from trading houses.
Everyone was instructed to get together as much money as they possibly could—whether it was money they had in the bank already, or from selling real or personal property, or even to beg or borrow from relatives or friends.
It merges two funding channels for updating technology: a general fund agencies can borrow from and repay with cost savings from new equipment, and a rule allowing agencies to keep any money saved from new equipment purchases within their budget.
That some of the women running for office talk openly about "beating the boys" suggests it's seeping into politics: Candidates now believe large numbers of female voters will see a competitive woman and, to borrow from Erin Collier, say Hell, yeah.
LONDON (Reuters) - Brexit poses risks to the ability of British companies to borrow from European banks and to some clearing activity which might have to relocate from London once Britain leaves the EU, the Bank of England said on Tuesday.
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - The European Central Bank could pay banks to borrow from it provided they lend on the funds to households and companies, ECB President Mario Draghi said on Thursday, outlining a new loan program intended to boost credit growth.
The offering is enabled by the fact that Jyske Bank can go into money markets and borrow from institutional investors at a negative rate and is in turn passing this deal along to customers, Jyske's housing economist Mikkel Høegh said.
With the metro region said to account for about 10 percent of the national economy, it doesn't take a seer to appreciate that such a blow would be, to borrow from Mr. Trump when he's in high dudgeon, a disaster.
In the Opinion essay "When Forecasters Get It Wrong: Always," Ruchir Sharma writes about predictions made one year ago—and just how wrong experts were: To borrow from Yogi Berra, it is tough to make predictions, especially about the future.
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York has found that during the 2008 crisis, banks were willing to pay almost half a percentage point more to borrow from other sources — and once Lehman Brothers crashed, that premium jumped to 1.26 percent.
India's economy has sagged in the past year partly because many small and medium-sized businesses and consumers have found it tough to borrow from the banks, or from the shadow lenders, officially known as non-banking financial companies (NBFCs).
That said, the product can't help but borrow from Tinder, with its set of rounded like/dislike buttons (why is there never a maybe?), photo-centric profiles that reward the genetically blessed, the integrated private chat and now Instagram integration, too.
Adding to the pile of problems is the European Central Bank's plan to gradually reduce its stimulus, meaning that there could be an uptick in market volatility, making it more expensive for the Italian government to borrow from capital markets.
It calls for streamlining the loan repayment system and limiting how much graduate students and parents can borrow from the federal government, as well as making Pell grants available to incarcerated students and those enrolled in short-term certificate programs.
Elected in part on working-class anger at elites, he keeps proposing giant tax cuts for the rich financed by cutting health care for the needy, and his tax "plan" would in effect borrow from China to reward billionaires like himself.
Her provocative images borrow from fashion, advertising, burlesque and pornography; push the unpromising 77123s trend of Photo Realism into new areas of gorgeousness and abstraction; and explore the varying ways in which women do and do not own their bodies.
Another potential strategy to minimize BEAT could be for a U.S.-based company that shifts profits abroad through interest payments to borrow from banks in the future, rather than from foreign affiliates because third-party interest payments are exempt from BEAT, experts said.
On 6 October, the Russian government amended its federal procurement law, allowing Russian LRGs to borrow from banks at a floating rate, set with reference to the Central Bank of Russia's (CBR) key rate, which it cut to 10% from 10.5% last month.
Just like its approach to core battle royale, which feels like a best-of compilation of the genre's smartest features mixed with much-needed innovations, Respawn's take on ranked play will make you wonder why other developers don't borrow from it more often.
Bond dealers expect the liquidity deficit - the extent to which banks need to borrow from the central bank to fund their own lending - to rise to as much as 3 trillion rupees by March from 1.5 trillion rupees right now, pushing rates higher.
Creators can borrow a ZCam S1 for free Creators can borrow a ZCam S1 for free The new Community page also aims to address problems by giving creators the ability to borrow from Blend Media 360 cameras for their upcoming projects and experiments.
The three-month London interbank offered rate (Libor) USD3MFSR=X, a measure of the cost for a bank to borrow from other banks, has surged in the past few weeks and expanded their premium above rates based on expected Federal Reserve interest rates.
FRANKFURT, March 10 (Reuters) - The European Central Bank could pay banks to borrow from it provided they lend on the funds to households and companies, ECB President Mario Draghi said on Thursday, outlining a new loan programme intended to boost credit growth.
It was last at those levels in January 2010, and it is a sea change from the start of the year when Portugal was paying a 200-250 basis points premium over its Southern European counterparts to borrow from bond market investors.
The Financial Services Agency, the regulator overseeing banks, securities brokerages and other financial institutions, is extending by five years a programme allowing regional banks and credit unions to borrow from the public purse more easily, people knowledgeable about the matter told Reuters.
The repo rate is a rate at which commercial banks can borrow from the central bank to cover temporary shortages of liquidity; the central bank buys domestic government securities from the banks and sells them back two weeks or one month later.
Praveen Khandelwal, secretary of the Confederation of All India Traders, a traders lobby group, said a majority of India's traders and small manufacturers were finding it difficult to borrow from banks, who are struggling to deal with $150 billion in distressed assets.
But to borrow from another holiday special, the commercial imperative to adorn the story with shiny baubles to suit the frenetic demands of modern animation is a bit like the little Christmas tree that Charlie Brown brings home to Linus and the gang.
In terms of the burden of dreams (to borrow from another documentary about a filmmaker, Werner Herzog), the central character's plight has a good deal in common with Woody Allen's "Stardust Memories," where the adulation of fans has mostly become an annoyance.
Wanting to borrow from international models but also wanting to take account of New Zealand's biculturalism, the New Zealand project has two strands, with one looking specifically at capturing the voices of Māori women, and their interactions with both feminism and the law.
But what brings them together is how they borrow from the traditions of documentary photography, their ability to turn the genre on its head, and their use of Instagram to get their work and ideas into the world with a sense of urgency.
In the summer election campaign, Angela Merkel refused to borrow from the racist vocabulary of the AfD -- which had seen its popularity grow across Germany over the past four years -- before it entered the Bundestag this year with 12.6 percent of the vote.
Some borrow from Japan, like the soft-cooked eggs in the style of a ramen shop with red lids of jellied chile oil or the beech mushrooms, fried tempura style, wonderful even if their horseradish-cream sauce wasn't quite an ideal match.
The collection begins with the Anansi tales of West Africa, stories featuring a trickster character who is both a human and a spider, a decision that Ms. Tatar describes as "pragmatic" because so many of the later tales borrow from these foundational myths.
And this is far from over: Batman v Superman director Zack Snyder has said that his upcoming superhero feature Justice League — about a team of superheroes recruited by Batman to save the world — will borrow from Seven Samurai and The Magnificent Seven.
The Fed already said on Sunday that it encouraged depositary institutions to use the emergency lending window and announced they may borrow from it for periods as long as 90 days, pre-payable and renewable by the borrower on a daily basis.
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Istanbul's new mayor has said Turkey's state banks stopped making routine loans to the city after a June election in which he pulled off a shock victory over President Tayyip Erdogan's ruling AK Party (AKP), forcing it to borrow from abroad.
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Istanbul's new mayor has said Turkey's state banks stopped making routine loans to the city after a June election in which he pulled off a shock victory over President Tayyip Erdogan's ruling AK Party (AKP), forcing it to borrow from abroad.
Finding it hard to borrow from banks worried by stressed loans at their worst level in 13 years, cash-strapped private firms have kept a lid on fresh capital outlay, dashing Modi's hopes that higher public spending would provide a stronger investment multiplier.
The critic Roland Barthes touched upon this subject in his seminal study Writing Degree Zero — though his conclusion, that "revolution must of necessity borrow, from what it wants to destroy, the very image of what it wants to posses," remains decidedly pessimistic.
A report by the Ombudsman Commission of PNG into the 2014 deal that allowed the country to borrow from UBS to buy a 10 per cent stake in Australian Stock Exchange-listed energy firm Oil Search is scheduled to be tabled in parliament next week.
A good place to start would be to gradually reduce the maximum amount of money students can borrow from the federal government, a reform that would put pressure on colleges to reduce tuition rate increases and provide alternative, more cost-effective means for providing education.
From Victoria's Secret models wearing Native American headdresses and African neck rings, to white models donning colorful dreadlocks for Marc Jacobs, to geisha fashion shoots for Vogue, major labels and publications continue to struggle with what is and isn't appropriate to borrow from other cultures.
All these importers used to raise dollar funds against LoUs at 2.5 percent to 3 percent offshore, but this would go up to as much as 12 percent or more as companies would be forced to borrow from local banks in India, they said.
There's not much additional information out there yet regarding the plug-in Jeep, except that it could borrow from the hybrid version of the Chrysler Pacifica, which offers a fully electric range of 33 miles and an overall efficiency rating of 32 miles per gallon.
Zayn wasn't enthused by One Direction's Journey or Beastie Boys predilections, but he's more than willing to borrow from The Weeknd, Miguel, Chris Brown, and, notably, R&B darling Kehlani, who shows up for a hot second on one of the album's few stand-outs.
Kavanaugh's questions seemed to borrow from a federal appeals court opinion, which rather dubiously argued that Whole Woman's Health should not apply in Louisiana because it is easier for Louisiana doctors to get admitting privileges than it is for Texas doctors to do so.
"What we're seeing when people cash out their retirement plans, or borrow from them, or fail to save for an emergency is not a lack of knowledge or awareness, but the result of people genuinely needing to spend the money today," Ms. Schneider said.
Lynton predicts the music business will one day borrow from the approach film studios have used for years to release movies — a system known as "windowing," where consumers who want immediate access to the latest works pay more than those who are willing to wait for it.
And while the initiative is still very much a work in progress—like with any century-old system, overhauling it isn't easy—it represents yet another lesson in mass transit an ostensibly modern city like New York would do well to borrow from its counterpart overseas.
For sticklers, investment only deserves "impact" status if it delivers both near-market level returns and strict measurement of the non-financial impact: eg, of the carbon emissions saved by a renewable-energy project; or of the number of poor people who borrow from a microcredit institution.
To create a hybrid structure, an issuer would borrow from the Spotify precedent and add in elements of the modified Dutch auction process that Google used to go public in 2004 (which was viewed dimly at the time, thus discouraging copycats, but which worked in retrospect).
Egypt said it had capped the government's ability to borrow from the central bank via an overdraft account at 66 billion Egyptian pounds ($3.82 billion) in 2018/19, equal to 10 pct of the previous three years' revenue, as a way of managing liquidity and reducing inflation.
Vitor Constancio's comments supported a view that the ECB was unlikely to ease monetary policy again in the near future after it cut interest rates in March, ramped up its money-printing program and unveiled a scheme where banks would be paid to borrow from it.
"In the summer, we would make enough to keep going for brief periods, but in the winter it was like a Samuel Beckett play, all blue faces and long coats, barely enough money to get by, borrow from friends, cut down on food," Mr. Screech said.
In addition, under the ECB's third Targeted Longer-Term Refinancing Operation (TLTRO III) banks will be able to borrow from the central bank at 10 basis points above the average rate applied in the Main Refinancing Operations, currently set at zero, over the life of the loan.
In the face of such doubt, it is not surprising that some individuals, even those who are intelligent and well educated, are swept away by the breezy confidence of health gurus, who are full of passionate intensity while the qualified lack all conviction, to borrow from Yeats.
One source also pointed out that it risked creating arbitrage opportunities for some banks when taken in combination with ECB's Longer-Term Refinancing Operation (TLTRO III), in which banks are paid to borrow from the ECB provided that they lend that cash on to households and firms.
This was a blow to Brazil's art world and to its international image, already damaged by the destruction of its National Museum, which burned to the ground last week and didn't have a fire protection system, raising questions about the country's preparedness to borrow from other institutions.
DENVER, Oct 18 (Reuters) - Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Robert Kaplan said on Friday that it "bothers" him that banks can borrow from each other overnight more cheaply than they can for longer periods - a topsy turvy situation that he said could lead to tighter financial conditions.
Their big multibillion-dollar bet, the vision floating in Mark Zuckerberg's crystal ball, is clearly that this new frontier is "cyberspace," to use William Gibson's term, or "the Oasis," to borrow from READY PLAYER ONE, a copy of which was once issued to every new Oculus employee.
BUT GROSS DOMESTIC SAVINGS, ALONG WITH THE AMOUNT OF SAVINGS WE BORROW FROM ABROAD, IS WHAT GROSS DOMESTIC INVESTMENT IS, AND GROSS DOMESTIC INVESTMENT PLUS SOME EDUCATIONAL ISSUES IS THE KEY FACTOR IN PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH AND PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH IS THE KEY FACTOR IN OVERALL ECONOMIC GROWTH.
While the $545 price tag means the entrepreneurial pair certainly could afford to each have their own, the Kardashian/Jenner crew is known to borrow from each others' closets, and we like thinking Kim yanked this out of Kylie's enviable walk-in when her little sis wasn't looking.
"I would like to share with you a recent decision by the government... We are comfortable that we can borrow from the market at interest rates lower than the... rate charged by the IMF on this specific amount of 280 million euros," Phaedon Kalozois said, speaking at a conference.
"I want to point out that the proposal contains an ingenious device that would enable the European Union to borrow from the market at a very advantageous rate without incurring a direct obligation for itself or for its member states," he said, according to a transcript of the speech.
" The surest path forward, if Democrats are to borrow from Sanders heading into the midterms, is what Murphy told me when I asked him if he was advocating the abandonment of complexity: "I think underneath the big, easy-to-understand ideas can be a second level of nuance.
"We are not doing our children any favors when we borrow from their future in order to invest in systems and policies that are not yielding better results," DeVos said in prepared remarks to Congress discussing the Department of Education's budget proposal, filed by President Trump earlier this year.
Rather I think that probably—to borrow from the late Denny Green—The Crew is what I thought it was: a pretty-good game with a lot of things to unlock as you dipped in and out of the game, while getting on with the rest of your life.
Ms. Lucas's "Bunny Gets Snookered" series, from 1997, offers a gallery of stuffed pantyhose forms slouching on their own chairs, mimicking skinny, limp half-bodies that borrow from the soft-sculpture aesthetic of Louise Bourgeois and Yayoi Kusama and, less often mentioned, the African-American artist Senga Nengudi.
Byrne has some prescriptions for them and, by extension, for a United States that has, to borrow from one of his vintage songs, stopped making sense: Reach out, make a close study of people other than yourself, and please do not forget to vote in the next elections.
Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: One requires them to own a recent model of the iPhone, and the other leverages the Watch — which participants can either buy for $49 (a sliver of the original $300 price tag) or borrow from researchers free of charge.
Instead of following the path set forth by the Founders to create money directly, our government became obliged to borrow from private banks, which assumed the sovereign power to create money from nothing and then loan it to the government, turning on its head the intention of the Founders.
I'm asking because you just said that the passages in questions don't contain original ideas and are just a matter of restating basic facts, but those facts had to be collected and corroborated by the people you borrow from, so in that sense, you are stealing their labor, no?
Still, some kind of agreement is considered the most likely outcome, and the odds are also shortening on Britain eventually staying in the EU. But the gap between British companies' bond yields - the cost to borrow from investors - and that of European rivals has surged to the widest in years.
I've noted that more and more writers now borrow from rock stars the accoutrements of the "tour," including set lists, promotional posters, T-shirts, and other merchandise, which they publicize on Twitter and Instagram and sell on their Web sites; after reading, they pose for selfies at bars or cafés.
What they did: Physicist-turned-biologist Mitchell Newberry and linguist Christopher Ahern along with their colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania ran their statistical models, which borrow from techniques in population genetics, on databases of digitized texts containing more than 400 million words and spanning the 12th to 21st centuries.
"And the innovative nature of the new TLTRO II (targeted longer-term refinancing operations) program, whereby banks will be incentivized to lend into the real economy with the carrot of being paid to borrow from the ECB, should be more effective at the margin at supporting bank lending," he said.
According to the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, 4013 percent of plan participants borrow from their 401(k) plan each year and about 20 percent currently have a loan outstanding to their account, based on data from Vanguard Group, which administers plans for more than 24 million Americans.
To further enhance the role of the discount window as a tool for banks in addressing potential funding pressures, the Board also today announced that depository institutions may borrow from the discount window for periods as long as 90 days, prepayable and renewable by the borrower on a daily basis.
Mr. Thacker and his colleagues who designed the Alto — Butler Lampson, Alan Kay and Robert Taylor — had proved prescient when they built into the computer what is known as a graphical user interface, the technology that Apple and Microsoft would borrow from in creating their Macintosh and Windows operating systems.
Ferriss said "in Austin I found a ... very young community and a medley of feature film, music — certainly tech if I need to scratch that itch — but there were more perspectives that I could borrow from and learn from than I found readily available in my circles in Silicon Valley."
"The story in global markets over the past 24 hours has centered on a broad-based tightening of monetary policy conditions (and the perception of future tightening), while the cost to borrow from certain financial institutions has also increased," said Chris Weston, chief market strategist at spread-better IG, in a Friday note.
Last year, a disgraced former director of the Washington, D.C., VA had to be rehired just one month after being fired – even though, under his watch, it was found that inventories were so mismanaged that doctors had to run out mid-procedure and borrow from neighboring hospitals while patients were under anesthesia.
With no blueprint to borrow from the United States for making states entirely from scratch, Californians would likely have to resort to the initiative process, where their judgment is notoriously questionable, to hammer out how many states, if any, the Second Bear Republic would include and where exactly their borders would be drawn.
The institution also said it could pay banks to borrow from it provided they lend the funds to households and companies under a new targeted longer-term refinancing operations (TLTRO) policy, under which four-year loans would be offered at the ECB's main refinancing rate, with a discount for more active lenders.
References are almost certainly going to be part of the story moving forward, but there are only so many times that an audience is going to sit through a show that cribs from E.T./Close Encounters/Aliens type story, even if we get a whole new set of references to borrow from.
Here we're going to explain everything you need to know about USB4, including the speed improvements in the pipeline and the new capabilities it's going to borrow from Thunderbolt 3.13, which shares the same port shape but is a different and more demanding protocol that can piggyback on top of USB-C ports.
Their importance rested, to borrow from a WASP acquaintance's email this week, on being "primus inter pares" — first among equals, with a particular kind of power in a particular set of institutions, and an ability to set a tone for the American upper class that was adopted by other groups when they ascended.
Switch jobs mid-degree, and you'll likely find a semester or two of coursework isn't covered.) One in five workers eligible to borrow from a retirement account had an outstanding loan at the end of 2014 (the most recent data available), according to a 2016 briefing from the Employee Benefit Research Institute.
Switch jobs mid-degree, and you'll likely find a semester or two of coursework isn't covered.) One in 5 workers eligible to borrow from a retirement account had an outstanding loan at the end of 2014 (the most recent data available), according to a 2016 briefing from the Employee Benefit Research Institute.
And, here is the rub, most of that debt has been loaned directly by the government and, as the current policy debate illustrates, students who borrow from the government don't necessarily have the same expectations and sense of repayment obligation to their lender – as those receiving loans from a private financial institution.
In 2014, President Xi Jinping announced that China would provide the bulk of the $50 billion to set up an Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and then said a month later that China would also set up a $40 billion fund to invest in many of the same countries that would borrow from the bank.
In a decree which came into force on Tuesday, Italy reinstated a measure adopted in the past to provide liquidity to banks and committed up to 300 million euros for a guarantee provided by the Treasury on new bonds issued by Carige in addition to funds it may borrow from the Bank of Italy.
There are a bunch of design notes about the logic that went into the font over at It's Nice That (Nathan's site showcasing the font is currently offline) emphasizing the focus on "cinematic" uppercase letters and curves that borrow from the existing Netflix logo, but mostly it just looks like a knock-off Helvetica.
The reason it's frustrating to see Damon in The Great Wall or Emma Stone in Aloha or Joseph Fiennes in Urban Myths is that it's hard enough for an actor of color to snag a meaty role without getting shut out of stories that borrow from their culture or revolve around people of their heritage.
Know your employer's approach to loans, as some plans may require you borrow from your savings before taking a hardship withdrawal, said Paul Porretta, partner at law firm Pepper Hamilton in New York Starting in 2020, individuals who turn 72 are required to take annual mandatory distributions from their workplace retirement plans and their IRAs.
They know that the only realistic and, to borrow from this week's language from Mr. Trump, humane policy is to find a fair and safe way to allow non-criminal, undocumented immigrants to get right with the law and go about their lives, paying taxes, having a valid Social Security number, and earning a legal status.
But until that lesson becomes as true for women as it is for men, to borrow from straight cinema, gay films will always be like Titanic's Rose on the door, with lesbian filmmaking like Jack in the water: neither in a great position, but one with a much better shot of making it to the lifeboat.
What I remember about that night, in addition to the "beauty" of the explosions, to borrow from Brian Williams, and the lack of concern with the consequences on the ground, was that the bombings were immediately received as an enormous success, and everyone who had opposed the idea were suddenly asked to apologize for their opposition.
To borrow from Einat Lev, whose commentary on the Kilauea Volcano was one of CNN Opinion's top reads of the year, I might apply this quotation to 2018 itself: "This event -- beautiful, destructive, frightening -- also presents a moment for all of us to appreciate the immense power of the forces that never cease shaping our planet."
But the larger, more pervasive scandal in New York State, to borrow from the writer Michael Kinsley, is not what's criminal but what's perfectly legal: the influence of powerful players funneling political contributions to lawmakers through limited liability companies that avoid restrictions on corporate donations, and through personal donations for which the state sets an excessively high limit.
While it's generally a bad idea to dip into your retirement savings early, there are certain situations when borrowing from your 401(k) ahead of retirement "makes sense," Catherine Golladay, president of Schwab Retirement Plan Services, tells CNBC Make It. "Generally speaking, people should only borrow from their 401(k) as a last resort," Golladay says.
What the ultimate writing device needs to borrow from the Microsoft Surface are the two things that tablet got just right: a thin, light, tactile, removable keyboard that doubles as the screen cover, and a slim kickstand so you can view it at a decent angle and you don't get the crick in the neck from craning down at the screen.
"And, to borrow from Orwell, all 'foreign agents' are equal, but it looks like only RT is denied congressional accreditation on the basis of FARA status, while the likes of NHK and China People's Daily carry on business as usual, and US officials continue to claim that the forced FARA registration for RT America's operating company isn't at all discriminatory," she continued.
Ayesha Singh visually overlays the arched hallways of the palace with architectural sculptures that borrow from Gothic, Indo-Saracenic, Victorian, Mughal, sacred Hindu, and Brutalist architectural styles found in India and the UK. Her two sculptures, "Hybrid Drawings" (1) and (2) from 2018, investigate evidence of colonialism and social hierarchy embedded in the ornamentation, design, and materials of architectural facades in India.
Most states had to borrow from the federal government to pay benefits during the recession, so when unemployment insurance taxes on employers increased so that states could pay back the loans, business groups lobbied their state legislatures to shift the costs onto workers instead by cutting benefits, restricting eligibility, and in some instances, by making it harder to apply for benefits.
In Tennessee, where Ms. Riel and other members of Tennessee's first cohort of scholarship recipients graduate this spring, community college enrollment numbers are up by a third, while the amount that students are having to borrow from the federal government is down, though it is unclear what effect the money is having on on-time graduation, a key goal of the New York plan.
A loan you can borrow from when you need cashHow to get a credit card with bad creditWhen someone else opened a credit card in my name, I might have panicked — but thanks to free credit monitoring it was no big deal Making a quick phone call after checking my credit fixed a $12,000 error and increased my credit score by 100 pointsMore personal finance coverageWhat's the best airline credit card?
Given the lackluster success in addressing the issues that ail VA's workforce to date, perhaps it is time to re-think how we deal with whistleblowing at the VA. One suggestion is to borrow from the statutory scheme applicable to VA benefits claims, which provides a generous standard of proof in which the veteran is given the benefit of the doubt, and any ambiguous laws are resolved in the veteran's favor.
And it's worth mentioning that if you are a Marvel aficionado, you may have noticed that when their films borrow from different genres, whether that's political thriller (Captain America: The Winter Soldier), space opera (the Guardians of the Galaxy films) or heist (Ant-Man), they usually end up in the same place, namely a finale filled with CGI explosions and punching that will decide the fate of the world and/or universe.
" Ultimately, Rothenberg tells the professors, the idea from the start was to borrow from the best of top venture firms to create a next-generation juggernaut: "At times, I've said, 'What if you could take the service-model approach of Andreessen Horowitz, and the founder-first community building offline and online approach of First Round Capital, with the processing power and reach of Silicon Valley angels, and the discretion of Floodgate, and the judgment of Sequoia?
But tell them that, despite having a fighting chance to replace him with a conservative, they should trade their great champion and bulwark on abortion, marriage and religious liberty — to borrow from one eulogy, "the mighty rearguard in our long and slow defeat" — for an Obama appointee at a moment when social liberalism is ascendant and the legal and cultural consequences of same-sex marriage are beginning to ripple across the country and the courts … well, they'll look at you like you're insane.
One possibility that Apple is working on, according to the report from August 2016, is a photo app akin to Instagram or Snapchat; another would be taking features that borrow from these two apps but incorporating them straight into Apple's native photo app; a third would be to build more social features and social integrations into other existing Apple services, such as communications services that would unify all of your interactions, photos and other touchpoints with people into one place.
As one famous study put it, so extensive and encompassing was the SPD's organization that its supporters could live in it "from cradle to grave": An SPD member could read the party's newspapers, borrow from its book clubs, drink in its pubs, keep fit in its gyms, sing in its choral societies, play in its orchestra, take part in its … theater organizations, compete in its chess clubs and join, if a woman, the SPD women's movement and if young, the youth organization.
Under the hood, we could see a much bigger changes in the way people actually use Android thanks to a new set of gestures that seem to borrow from the swipe controls Apple put in the iPhone X. We're also expecting the debut of the new Slices API, which still needs a more detailed explanation from Google, but from what a few enterprising developers have gleaned so far, seems to be a new type of UI feature that makes it easy for developers to display snippets from one app inside completely separate apps or processes.

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