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40 Sentences With "spendthrifts"

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

That kind of spending would make even liberal spendthrifts blush.
Creditors doubt its resolve and expect it to go on bailing out the spendthrifts.
Because Capricorns are so self-reliant, they're finicky about their resources and can become miserly spendthrifts.
And that's just how the spendthrifts and crony capitalists in both parties in Congress want it.
Flushing money down the toilet is usually only a metaphor, reserved for spendthrifts or those casual with their cash.
The ECB has been criticised both for favouring northern European creditors over southern European debtors and for cosseting southern spendthrifts.
All of these ideas come with more negative baggage than any accusation that the Republicans are spendthrifts or irresponsible on deficits.
The company's obsessive efforts to cut back on costs can almost make other private equity firms look like spendthrifts in comparison.
African countries should be cheered when they save, says Uche Orji, its chief executive (pictured), since they are often chastised as spendthrifts.
And the French, the Italians and the Spaniards will just keep quiet, pushed into a corner and chastised as spendthrifts and underperformers.
But Bitcoin can count at least one group of spendthrifts among its users: Russian hackers accused of hacking in the 2016 election.
However, your children or grandchildren won't always be in an ideal position to receive a windfall, particularly if they are minors, disabled or spendthrifts.
Recovery from drought and currency collapse is likely in 20193, but may come too late to prevent the return of the spendthrifts of yore.
Do you think that colleges and universities have become bloated spendthrifts and that the government should deploy a set of threats to force cost cutting?
If you, like me, think that society could benefit from fewer spendthrifts and more savers, Mr. Yang's proposal makes much more sense than Senator Warren's.
According to media reports, the "thrifty four" — Austria, Denmark, Sweden and The Netherlands — dug in to lead what was called a "war of attrition" with the spendthrifts.
You've probably heard about how Australian millionaire Tim Gurner labeled millennials as spendthrifts and said they'd never be able to buy homes because they're blowing their money on little splurges like avocado toast.
For decades, financial advisers, self-help authors and software firms have come up with systems to help spendthrifts budget and save money, only to see the vast majority drop them like New Year gym memberships.
And research has shown tightwads and spendthrifts - to quote a 2012 paper published in the Journal of Marketing Research and entitled Fatal Attraction - tend to marry each other, since people look for qualities in their mates that they lack in themselves.
The case is a clear reminder that many in Germany have misgivings about a currency their then-chancellor Helmut Kohl helped create in the early 1990s but which they now fear has bound their nation to bail out spendthrifts such as Greece.
Some of them are still telling the Chinese that U.S. trade deficits and rising foreign debt are pre-ordained, because even in good years American spendthrifts save barely 6% of their after-tax income, while the penny-pinching Chinese squirrel away half of what they earn.
Even though it made him "a little uncomfortable," David Leonhardt of the New York Times acknowledged recently that the familiar story of the politics of the federal budget is wrong: Democrats are not irresponsible spendthrifts, but consistently devoted to fiscal responsibility and reducing the federal deficit.
Dorothea and Frederick were described as great spendthrifts, and it was said that she was not happy until she had spent her last penny.
The film begins on wealthy couple Chalapathi (R. Nageshwara Rao) & Shantamma (G. Varalakshmi) who lead a happy family life with two sons Ramu & Shankar. Chalapathi is the one that spendthrifts for his vanity.
In addition to the pain of paying not being constant across different methods of payment, it also does not hold constant across individuals. Research has shown that different types of people experience different levels of pain of paying, which can in turn affect spending decisions Rick, S. I., Cryder, C. E., & Loewenstein, G. (2008). Tightwads and spendthrifts. Journal of consumer research, 34(6), 767-782..
Cost Conscious? The Neural and Behavioral Impact of Price Primacy on Decision- Making. Journal of Marketing Research 52(4),467–481 If activity in the nucleus accumbens (reward centre) was unable to counteract the activity (pain experienced) in the insular cortex, the participant would not purchase the product in question, as paying was too "painful" Rick, S. I., Cryder, C. E., & Loewenstein, G. (2008). Tightwads and spendthrifts.
The modern legal remedy for spendthrifts is usually bankruptcy. However, during the 19th and 20th centuries, a few jurisdictions, such as the U.S. states of Oregon and Massachusetts, experimented with laws under which the family of such a person could have him or her legally declared a "spendthrift" by a court of law.William Herbert Page, The Law of Contracts, 2nd ed. (Cincinnati: W.H. Anderson Co., 1920), 2848-2849.
In fact from 1904 Kraepelin changed the section heading to "The born criminal", moving it from under "Congenital feeble-mindedness" to a new chapter on "Psychopathic personalities". They were treated under a theory of degeneration. Four types were distinguished: born criminals (inborn delinquents), pathological liars, querulous persons, and Triebmenschen (persons driven by a basic compulsion, including vagabonds, spendthrifts, and dipsomaniacs). The concept of "psychopathic inferiorities" had been recently popularised in Germany by Julius Ludwig August Koch, who proposed congenital and acquired types.
The process of centralizing power included the development of a new kind of persecution aimed at minorities. The European nation-states had not exhibited a 'habit' of persecuting minorities before the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Jews, lepers, heretics and gays were the first minorities to be persecuted, and they were followed in the next few centuries by Gypsies, beggars, spendthrifts, prostitutes, and discharged soldiers (like contemporary homeless vets). They were all vulnerable to whatever degree they existed 'outside' the community.
Cornelius Coot (1790–1880) founded Duckburg (and the real-world, but since closed Mickey's Toontown Fair at the Magic Kingdom). He first appeared as a statue in Walt Disney's Comics and Stories #138 in the 1952 story "Statuesque Spendthrifts" by Carl Barks. His statue and legacy has later appeared in many other stories. Although Cornelius was a well-known figure to readers of Disney comics, his character history was not told until Don Rosa began using the character in the late 1980s.
He described the pre-internet corporate music industry as "a system that ensured waste by rewarding the most profligate spendthrifts in a system specifically engineered to waste the band's money," which aimed to perpetuate its structures and business arrangements while preventing bands (except for "monumental stars") from earning a living. He contrasted it with the independent scene, which encouraged resourcefulness and established an alternative network of clubs, promoters, fanzines, DJs and labels, and allowed musicians to make a reasonable income due to the system's greater efficiency.
Practical Pig, Fiddler Pig and Fifer Pig are three brothers who build their own houses with bricks, sticks and straw respectively. Practical Pig warns his brothers to build their house with "War Savings Certificate" bricks so that the house will be a solid defence against the marauding Wolf. Fifer and Fiddler ignore him and continue to play, singing "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?". As they are singing, the Big Bad Wolf in Nazi swastika regalia attacks the two spendthrifts and blows Fifer's straw house down.
This is what is known as a spendthrift clause or spendthrift provision. A spendthrift provision creates an irrevocable trust preventing creditors from attaching the interest of the beneficiary in the trust before that interest (cash or property) is actually distributed to him or her. Most well-drafted irrevocable trusts contain spendthrift provisions even though the beneficiaries are not known to be spendthrifts. This is because such a provision protects the trust and the beneficiary in the event a beneficiary is sued and a judgment creditor attempts to attach the beneficiary's interest in the trust.
Neither of Woolsey's novels were published in her lifetime. In 1931 Middle Earth, a collection of 36 poems came out, and in 1939 she published Death's Other Kingdom, an account of her experiences during the first few months of the Spanish Civil War. She translated two books from Spanish to English - Spanish Fairy Stories (1944), and The Spendthrifts (1951), a translation of La de Bringas by Galdos which sold 70,000 copies. Her science fiction short story, The Star of Double Darkness was published in the Saturday Evening Post in 1955.
This is particularly evident in the Delaware business trust, which could theoretically, with the language in the "governing instrument", be organized as a cooperative corporation or a limited liability corporation, although traditionally the Massachusetts business trust has been commonly used in the US. One of the most significant aspects of trusts is the ability to partition and shield assets from the trustee, multiple beneficiaries, and their respective creditors (particularly the trustee's creditors), making it "bankruptcy remote", and leading to its use in pensions, mutual funds, and asset securitization as well protection of individual spendthrifts through the spendthrift trust.
A spendthrift (also profligate or prodigal) is someone who spends money prodigiously and who is extravagant and recklessly wasteful, often to a point where the spending climbs well beyond his or her means. "Spendthrift" derives from an obsolete sense of the word "thrift" to mean prosperity rather than frugality,thefreedictionary.com, "thrift" so a "spendthrift" is one who has spent their prosperity.World Wide Words, "how thrift applied to spend can end up being someone who is not thrifty" Historical figures who have been characterized as spendthrifts include George IV of Great Britain, King Ludwig II of Bavaria,Gerhard Hojer (ed.): König Ludwig II.-Museum Herrenchiemsee.
One could argue that in the similar manner of Patriarchy, the man is the head of the household while the "fragile" woman is submissive and tends to remain behind the scenes. This brings to focus the idea that women are inferior and are thus dependent on their husbands. As a result, they not only rely on their husbands for financial support, but in the social realm are put at the same level as "children under age 12, mentally ill persons, and spendthrifts" (265). By way of tradition, not only are women given limited opportunities in what they are able to do and to be, but they are also viewed as people that cannot even take care of themselves.
Some writers would still use psychopathy in the general sense of mental illness, such as Austrian psychiatrist Sigmund Freud in Psychopathic Characters on Stage. From H. Cleckley to DSM-IV-TR: the evolution of the concept of psychopathy toward the medicalization of delinquency by RP Henriques, 2009, Rev. latinoam. psicopatol. fundam. vol.12 no.2. (Translation option on right) By contrast influential German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin, who had previously included a section on moral insanity in his psychiatric classification scheme, was by 1904 referring to specific psychopathic subtypes all involving antisocial, criminal or dissocial behaviour, including: born criminals (inborn delinquents), liars and swindlers, querulous persons, and driven persons (including vagabonds, spendthrifts, and dipsomaniacs).
The episode is a parody of the VH1 biography series Behind the Music and shares its narrator, Jim Forbes. It begins with the Simpson family history and how they got into show business: believing that families depicted in the numerous TV shows they watch together bare no resemblance to their comparative dysfunctionalism, Homer writes and directs an inadequate video "pilot" that fails to attract the attention of the major networks except for Fox, as its president happens to be Marge's hairdresser. After much fine-tuning and on-set mishaps produce many of the show's running gags, The Simpsons' resounding ratings and merchandising success makes the family extraordinarily wealthy; having moved out of their house on Evergreen Terrace to live in MC Hammer's former mansion, "Hammertime" (renamed "Homertime"), they expand their scope to include a series of Grammy-winning, "mega-platinum" novelty albums. Problems begin to arise as the Simpsons' fame continues: they become reckless spendthrifts, alternating between buying their colleagues extravagant gifts and paying them to perform embarrassing acts for their amusement.
He was appealing to his fellow tradespeople and craftspeople with these gifts, a middle class which would have been only too pleased to see their values promoted by such a prominent figure.Bruntjen, 216-17. In a speech before the Council to advocate the renovation of a building for the purpose of displaying public art, Boydell made the striking claim that if the rich could be persuaded to patronise art, they would forgo their wicked ways: > one might be found amongst the many spendthrifts of the present age, instead > of ruining themselves by gaming, or laying snares to debauch young Females, > by their false promises and many other bad vices; would be rejoiced at such > an opportunity, of reclaiming themselves by withdrawing from the snares laid > for them by bad and designing Men and Women, who constantly lay wait to lead > astray the young and unwary that are possessed of large property, such might > here have the pleasure and satisfaction to make a real Paradise on earth, by > illuminating a place that would for ever shine and display their > generosity.Quoted in Appendix III, Bruntjen, 275.

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