debitor

NOUN
  1. a person who owes a creditor; someone who has the obligation of paying a debt
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How To Use debitor In A Sentence

  • Accipe, Pompei, deductum carmen ab illo debitor est uitae qui tibi, Sexte, suae. qui seu non prohibes a me tua nomina poni, accedet meritis haec quoque summa tuis; siue trahis uultus, equidem peccasse fatebor, 5 delicti tamen est causa probanda mei. non potuit mea mens quin esset grata teneri; sit precor officio non grauis ira pio. The Last Poems of Ovid
  • Da nos hodie nostre pan quotidian, e pardona a nos nostre debitas como nos pardona a nostre debitores, e non duce nos in tentation, sed libera nos del mal. Archive 2006-12-01
  • You actually become a debitor (ph) to the bankruptcy court. CNN Transcript Dec 26, 2008
  • = See on i 2 _debitor ... uitae_, and compare _Tr_ V ix 11-14 'Caesaris est primum munus, quod ducimus auras;/gratia post magnos est tibi habenda deos./ille dedit uitam; tu quam dedit ille tueris,/et facis accepto munere posse frui': the similarity of phrasing makes it all but certain that the poem was addressed to The Last Poems of Ovid
  • Well, yes, but the debitor requires at least some ACH capability, which is not a given to just anybody. Progress Steals from Ex-Subscriber at cvillenews.com
  • Littera sera quidem, studiis exculte Suilli, huc tua peruenit, sed mihi grata tamen, qua, pia si possit superos lenire rogando gratia, laturum te mihi dicis opem. ut iam nil praestes, animi sum factus amici 5 debitor: et meritum uelle iuuare uoco. impetus iste tuus longum modo duret in aeuum, neue malis pietas sit tua lassa meis. ius aliquod faciunt adfinia uincula nobis The Last Poems of Ovid
  • Grant points out to me the technical terms of finance used in the passage: _debitor ... accedet The Last Poems of Ovid
  • Impressed by Scotus 'dictum, ˜Deus nullius est debitorMedieval Theories of Practical Reason
  • O! the charity of a penny cord; it sums up thousands in a trice: you have no true debitor and creditor but it; of what’s past, is, and to come, the discharge. Act V. Scene IV. Cymbeline
  • _Tr_ I v 10 'perpetuusque _animae debitor huius_ ero'. The Last Poems of Ovid
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