Loan
Call Loan Definition (in the Accounting Vocabulary)
The New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants offers the following definition of Call Loan in a way that is easy for anybody to understand: Loan repayable on demand. Also known as DEMAND LOAN.
Loan Definition (in the Accounting Vocabulary)
The New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants offers the following definition of Loan in a way that is easy for anybody to understand: Transaction wherein an owner of property, called the LENDER allows another party, the borrower, to use the property.
Term Loan Definition (in the Accounting Vocabulary)
The New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants offers the following definition of Term Loan in a way that is easy for anybody to understand: Loan for a specified time period.
Concept of Loan in the context of Real Property
A short definition of Loan: A lending of a principal sum of money to one who promises to repay said sum, plus interest.
Concept of Loan in the context of Real Property
A short definition of Loan: A lending of a principal sum of money to one who promises to repay said sum, plus interest.
Grammar
This term is a noun.
Etimology of Loan
(You may find loan at the world legal encyclopedia and the etimology of more terms).
late 12c., “that which is lent or owning, a thing furnished on promise of future return,” also “a gift or reward from a superior, a gift of God,” from Old Norse lan “loan,” from Proto-Germanic *laikhwniz (source also of Old Frisian len “thing lent,” Middle Dutch lene, Dutch leen “loan, fief,” Old High German lehan, German Lehn “fief, feudal tenure”), originally “to let have, to leave (to someone),” from PIE *loikw-nes-, suffixed form of root *leikw- “to leave” (see relinquish). The Norse word also is cognate (having the same ancestor) with Old English læn “gift,” which according to the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) did not survive into Middle English, but its derived verb lænan is the source of lend (verb). From early 15c. as “a contribution to public finances” (ostensibly voluntary but often coerced; sometimes repaid, sometimes not). As a verb, loan is attested from 1540s, perhaps earlier, and formerly was current, but it has now been supplanted in England by lend, though it survives in American English. Slang loan shark first attested 1900 (see shark; this term is also a noun.).
Loan
Hierarchical Display of Loan
Finance > Financial institutions and credit > Credit
Finance > Financial institutions and credit > Credit policy > Cost of borrowing > Interest
Finance > Financing and investment > Financing
Meaning of Loan
Overview and more information about Loan
For a more comprehensive understanding of Loan, see in the general part of the online platform.[rtbs name=”xxx-xxx”]
Resources
Translation of Loan
- Spanish: Préstamo
- French: Prêt
- German: Darlehen
- Italian: Erogazione di prestito
- Portuguese: Empréstimo concedido
- Polish: Pożyczka
Thesaurus of Loan
Finance > Financial institutions and credit > Credit > Loan
Finance > Financial institutions and credit > Credit policy > Cost of borrowing > Interest > Loan
Finance > Financing and investment > Financing > Loan
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