[
US
/dəˈpɑzɪtɝ/
]
[ UK /dɪpˈɒsɪtɐ/ ]
[ UK /dɪpˈɒsɪtɐ/ ]
NOUN
- a person who has deposited money in a bank or similar institution
How To Use depositor In A Sentence
- A gratuitous deposit for the sole benefit of the depositor is a much stronger case for the denial of these remedies to the depositary; yet we have a decision by the full court, in which Lord Ellenborough also took part, that a depositary has case, the reasoning implying that a fortiori a borrower would have trespass. The Common Law
- The reason is that depositors will withdraw their money and keep it under the mattress. Times, Sunday Times
- Its warehouses, far from only storing food, he said, were also used as depositories for weapons.
- Its victims turn out to be not its depositors but first-time homebuyers three years after the collapse. Times, Sunday Times
- A ‘Space Access Organization’ would, at least, be able to gather all the hard-won data from these canceled programs and maintain a central depository of information and expert knowledge.
- An amount standing to the credit of a joint account constitutes a debt which is owed by the bank to the depositors jointly and severally.
- It all points to depositors being hit by more than originally envisaged. Times, Sunday Times
- Plans are also afoot to transform the disused salt mines of Saxony and Thuringia into depositories for toxic waste.
- He said vitrified radioactive materials would be bound up in glass or other depositories and would not be easily released.
- In very simple terms banks receive equity capital from their shareholders and borrow money from their depositors. Times, Sunday Times