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Discover LudwigThe phrase "are receivables" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in financial or accounting contexts to refer to amounts owed to a company or individual.
Example: "In our financial report, we need to clarify which amounts are receivables and when we expect to collect them."
Alternatives: "are accounts receivable" or "are outstanding invoices".
Dictionary
are receivables
noun
A debt owed, usually to a business, from the perspective of that business
Exact(1)
Are receivables -- sales for which the company has not yet been paid -- piling up on its books?
Similar(59)
Spokane stations including KEEH and WXL86, and CJMG-FM, commonly known as Sun FM, from Penticton, British Columbia are receivable in the Omak area.
But a hidden cost of the rollout is receivables that will never be collected, auditors said.
Thayer (1898: 266, 530) articulates its significance in terms of two foundational principles of the law of evidence: first, without exception, nothing which is not relevant may be received as evidence by the court and secondly, subject to many exceptions and qualifications, whatever is relevant is receivable as evidence by the court.
Alternatively, interest may be receivable only upon maturity or redemption of the bond, as in the case of savings bonds.
However, even before Project Ozma, Seth reminds me, Edison, Tesla and Marconi had all considered the possibility that radio waves might be receivable from Mars or elsewhere.
Client acknowledges that without prejudice to the exclusivity of rights, the Services may be receivable and/or distributed in the Territory(ies) via the services of third parties located outside the Territory(ies) and that this is not a breach of this Agreement.
After synchronization, the physical DL channel is receivable and measurable.
If you try to call someone and there's no answer, you can leave a text, voice or video message for them that's receivable on any computer.
The British Broadcasting Corporation started broadcasting the BBC World Service on shortwave and mediumwave radio for a few hours a day across Europe from Orford Ness in Suffolk and Kvitsøy in Norway, the latter being receivable across England, Wales and Southern Scotland.
In response to the argument that the fees would never have been paid at a "time Stated," Cranch replied that: "[I]t may, perhaps, be a compliance with the clause of the constitution, which requires that it shall be receivable at stated times, to say that it shall be paid when the service is rendered.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com