Exact(1)
"Then they get into borrowing money and other bad things.
Similar(59)
Managers can also get into trouble by borrowing to cover taxes on the gains from exercising options.
If you get into trouble, don't borrow to make repayments without thinking carefully.
All these firms are now bank-holding companies, which means that their retail deposits are federally insured, and that when they get into trouble they can borrow cheaply from the Federal Reserve.
Johnny Cash, they called the guy who would borrow $20 to get into a club and end the night with $40 in his pocket, an endearing moocher who also ran up $500 on his credit cards from a night of buying drinks for the bar.
According to writer Aaron Gell, Williams channeled culture; his cut-and-paste style echoed what rappers were doing with samples, and like them, he occasionally got into trouble for borrowing material.
Their venture didn't really take off until relaxed enforcement of banking regulations made it possible for them to get into "leveraged buyouts" -- investments of borrowed money -- in a big way.
Climbing through windows and edging along a balcony to get into Smith's office, the student activists borrowed several folders full of the vice chancellor's confidential documents.
Companies will find it more difficult to borrow; weaker ones will accordingly get into trouble.
For one, the child could borrow a friend's car and get into an accident without being properly insured.
If governments get into trouble and need to reschedule their debts or borrow more even while they pay less, official lenders typically oblige.
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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