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Like the speaker won't call in "debts" on a close vote.
Another change is to corporate insolvency regimes, which typically make it harder to call in debts or seize collateral in the euro area than in America.
The clock was ticking on a Friday deadline by the bank, when it could call in debts of more than $317 million owed by Liverpool stemming from Hicks and Gillett's leveraged buyout of the English club in 2007.
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Like many Greeks battered by five years of austerity, he struggled to grasp why other European countries were calling in debts that even the International Monetary Fund had admitted were too crippling to be paid back.
Which brings us to the problem of calling in debts.
Benitez led Liverpool to Champions League glory in 2005 and took them back to the final in 2007, but the borrowing of the American owners finally took its toll as the banks called in debts and forced a protracted sale that damaged the club on and off the field.
"While mephedrone was legal, I recall police intelligence of disgruntled cocaine dealers calling in debts due to a loss of business.
But the stagecraft suggested a calling-in of debts.
This general financial malaise caused by the blockade led creditors to call in their debts.
"There is no pretense of, 'We're negotiating over your peace and we're going to call in these debts,' " the researcher said.
At least one gang is trying to call in drug debts in order to pay off Colombian gangsters following the loss of a huge shipment of cocaine off the Irish coast last year.
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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