In general, yes.
no
yes.
Non-recourse lending is made available as a loan in which the borrower is not personally liable. For instance, in the pre settlement funding realm, a plaintiff involved in a lawsuit can get a non-recourse based cash advance for their lawsuit. In this scenerio, the plaintiff or applicant for the non-recourse advance is only contigent to repay that advance back once the case is settled or won. In the event the case is lost, there is no need to repay that advance as that is the risk taken from the firm handling the advance. These are typically lent when there is high capital expenditures, long loan periods, and uncertain revenue streams from the loan itself. The rates can be much higher due to the risk involved for the lender, obviously.
I Will Repay - film - was created in 1923.
i will repay the amount by next wednesday
The duration of I Will Repay - film - is 1.17 hours.
A homograph for "repay" is "read." "Read" can be pronounced differently based on its context, just like "repay" can have different meanings based on its usage.
You can take a small business loan, but you will have to repay it or face bankruptcy and having your assets seized. Instead you can pursue a grant, which you do not have to repay.
The prefix of the word repay is re- and it means "do again".
I Will Repay - 1923 is rated/received certificates of: UK:U
“how can i get started on getting a grand , would i have to repay ”
If the cheque is for a 'settlement', then this money is for you to do with what you want. If the insurer is simply covering the repair costs, then yes, you need to repay the difference, otherwise you are defrauding them (even unintentionally).