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"how many debts" is a grammatically correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It is typically used as a question to ask about the number of debts someone has. Here are a few examples: 1. How many debts do you have left to pay off? 2. I'm curious, how many debts did you accumulate during your time in college? 3. Can you tell me how many debts you have and what the total amount is? 4. The company's financial crisis was caused by the large number of debts it had taken on. 5. How many debts is the average American carrying?.
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5) What have you accomplished so far? 6) How many debts do you currently have?
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Nobody knows how many debt-collection affidavits are filed each year, but a report by the nonprofit Legal Aid Society found that in New York City alone more than 450,000 were filed by debt buyers, from January 2006 to July 2008, yielding more than $1.1 billion in judgments and settlements.
The proposal includes a cap on how many times debt collectors can contact consumers per week.
Founder of the site, Mark Pearson, described how many people believe debt management education needs to be covered in schools, not just by adults, but by students also as 50 per cent of 586 students aged 18 to 21 said schools should do more.
"You can't believe how many people discharge medical debts," Ms. Limor said.
How many times has the debt ceiling been raised, and by whom? A. It has been a bipartisan exercise.
(And to guess: how many boosts to the debt ceiling came under the Reagan Administration?) To tell your grandmother: A new study shows that the Internet is making us less reliant on memory — but that may not be a bad thing.
Doing so tells the government how big an obligation it is taking on and tells holders of government debt how many other obligations they are competing against in their hope to be repaid.
It challenged a deeply held principle that "debts must always be repaid" by showing how, in the case of many debts owed by impoverished countries, the consequences of repayments were creating nearly unimaginable suffering.
But the country lacks a reliable credit bureau, so lenders could not tell how many cards or how much debt the borrowers carried.
Almost all of the federal government's $150 billion in annual student aid is distributed based on the number of students a college enrolls, regardless of how many graduate or how much debt they incur.
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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