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37 Sentences With "take out insurance"

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

Everyone had to take out insurance policies on the stones.
They take out insurance in case things don't turn out as planned.
But nevertheless, at that lower level, we might take out insurance in some circumstances.
If they take out insurance with a big-ticket purchase, it could earn a commission.
Funniest moment: our photog asking if the 20-somethings take out insurance on their gear.
The prudent move, for students and families, is for Congress to take out insurance now.
The Fed is getting closer to lower rates to take out "insurance" that does not happen.
So, there's down side risk and I think you'd like to take out insurance against that downside risk.
Fearful of not getting their money's worth from their slaves, owners would sometimes take out insurance policies on them.
Producers or owners may be required to take out insurance to cover the damage potentially caused by their robot.
Kocherlakota's own preference is for the Fed to take out "insurance" against a recession by cutting rates back to near zero.
Often people do not take out insurance because they think the worst will not happen, says Alison Martin of Zurich Insurance.
"It's not costless to take out insurance," Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren, a voting member of the central bank, told CNBC last week.
The best argument made on behalf of climate mitigation strategies is even if there's a small chance your house catches fire, you take out insurance.
The government encourages people to take out insurance to cover the gap between the reimbursement it provides practitioners and the rates most of them charge the public.
He should have imposed a stiffer penalty on those who refuse to take out insurance, to make sure healthier Americans broadened the risk pool and lowered premiums.
The Edinburgh festival decided last November to take out insurance against a weaker pound, buying euros and dollars when one pound purchased $1.30 instead of the current $1.22.
It has enabled farmers in the three countries, who are vulnerable to weather extremes and food shortages, to use mobile phones to access weather information and to take out insurance.
If you want to take out insurance, make sure you have plenty of bread on hand, and butter, and maybe some cheese, to round out the meal at its end.
They were all periods where financial markets had moved very substantially, but we hadn't gotten economic data that indicated a slowdown, and so we did take out insurance around those three instances.
My favorite exchange in the Vox interview: Bret Stephens The best argument made on behalf of climate mitigation strategies is even if there's a small chance your house catches fire, you take out insurance.
Signaling a pause in rate increases "was a pretty good way to take out insurance," in effect a decision to keep a looser-than-anticipated monetary policy in place in hopes of skirting some of those risks, Sharif said.
Policymakers insist the economy is in robust health, but financial markets are pricing in a quarter-point cut in U.S. interest rates before the end of the year, anticipating the Fed will take out insurance against a deeper slowdown.
But it also shows investors are eager to take out insurance in an era of near-zero bond yields since an unexpected uptick in inflation sent Bund yields surging from a record low of 103 percent in late April last year to above 1 percent by early June.
San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank President Mary Daly said at an event in New York that the next several weeks will be crucial at providing more clarity on whether the central bank needs to take out insurance in the form of a rate cut to stave off an economic downturn.
And just this week, we reported the bank had struck a partnership with another alumnus — insurtech Nimbla — that will enable Barclays&apos 1 million small- and medium-sized business (SMB) customers to take out insurance for a single invoice for as little as £6 ($7.86), rather than having to insure a whole book, which can cost around £5,000 ($6,549).
353 Under the Married Women's Property Act 1882 a husband can take out insurance in his own name, but make it enforceable by his wife and children despite the doctrine of privity.
One of her most famous portraits was distributed to over five million troops during WWII. Not only was she known as one of the first women to take out insurance on a body part, she was also known for being one of the highest paid female actors in Hollywood during her time.
Dicey makes some crucial mistakes in her new business, including failing to take out insurance on the tools and equipment in her workshop. When the workshop is broken into, she loses all she has and cannot make it up, despite help from Jeff. Increasingly desperate, Dicey takes help from a smooth-talking drifter who turns out to be a con artist. Eventually Dicey stacks the odds against herself and has to close up shop.
Shergar was insured through several different insurance companies. The Lloyd's of London insurance brokers Hodgson McCreedy covered £3,625,000 of the total, and added a theft clause to the policy. Other shareholders—accountable for £1.5 million worth of shares—had insurance that did not include a theft clause; Cosgrove was one of the mortality-only insured members. Shareholders accounting for £3 million did not take out insurance; the Aga Khan was one of the uninsured members of the syndicate.
Life is a risky business – which is why people take out insurance. But faced with an unexpected disaster, the state has to step in. Professor Ferguson travels to post-Katrina New Orleans to ask why the free market can't provide some of the adequate protection against catastrophe. His quest for an answer takes him to the origins of modern insurance in the early 19th century and to the birth of the welfare state in post-war Japan.
MPRLP works with Gram Sabhas to bring affordable financial services to the poorest rural villages. Being able to save, borrow, take out insurance and transfer money inexpensively helps the poor to weather difficulties. MPRLP helps self-help groups, cooperatives and Gram Sabhas extend different types of financial services to very remote areas. Project micro-finance institutions cover 1200 families in Jhabua District, 1621 self- help groups have access to Rs3 million and nearly 100,000 families are covered by some kind of insurance.
If agreements for money management take place through contracts, a professional trustee probably cannot exclude liability for breach of contract under section 3, because given that he would be better placed to take out insurance liability exclusion will probably not be reasonable under section 11. Lastly, the Limitation Act 1980 sections 21–22 prevents claims for innocent or negligent trust breach being pursued six years after the right of action accrues, again with the exception for fraud or property converted by trustees for their own use, where there is no limit.
Audiences of Macabre (1958), an $86,000 production distributed by Allied Artists, were invited to take out insurance policies to cover potential death from fright. The 1959 creature feature The Tingler featured Castle's most famous gimmick, Percepto: at the film's climax, buzzers attached to select theater seats unexpectedly rattled a few audience members, prompting either appropriate screams or even more appropriate laughter.Heffernan (2004), pp. 102–4. With such films, Castle "combine[d] the saturation advertising campaign perfected by Columbia and Universal in their Sam Katzman and William Alland packages with centralized and standardized publicity stunts and gimmicks that had previously been the purview of the local exhibitor".Heffernan (2004), pp. 95–98.
When one reasons prudentially, for example about the future reasons that one will have, one allows the reason in the future to justify one's current action without reference to the strength of one's current desires. If a hurricane were to destroy someone's car next year at that point he will want his insurance company to pay him to replace it: that future reason gives him a reason, now, to take out insurance. The strength of the reason ought not to be hostage to the strength of one's current desires. The denial of this view of prudence, Nagel argues, means that one does not really believe that one is one and the same person through time.
Self-insurance is a situation in which a person or business does not take out any third-party insurance, but rather a business that is liable for some risk, such as health costs, chooses to bear the risk itself rather than take out insurance through an insurance company. In the United States the concept applies especially to health insurance and may involve, for example, an employer providing certain benefits – generally health benefits or disability benefits – to employees and funding claims from a specified pool of assets rather than through an insurance company, as the term is traditionally used. In self-funded health care, the employer ultimately retains the full risk of paying claims, in contrast to traditional insurance, where all risk is transferred to the insurer.
See Franklin v South Eastern Railway (1858) 3 H&N; 211 and Fatal Accidents Act 1976 Employers are vicariously liable for all agents acting for them in the "course of employment" whenever their actions have a "close connection" to the job, and even if it breaks an employer's rules.See Turberville v Stampe (1697) 91 ER 1072 and Lister v Hesley Hall Ltd [2001] UKHL 22, [2002] 1 AC 215 An employer only has a defence if an employee, on a "frolic of his own", was not placed by an employer in a position to cause harm. Under the Employers' Liability (Compulsory Insurance) Act 1969, employers must take out insurance for all injury costs. Insurance companies may not sue their employee to recover costs unless there is fraud.

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