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Exactly no it doesn't when you do not use it in a monthly period your account then becomes inactive, and therefore you'd have to reactivate it again to be used once more
Yes, your claim would merely become inactive and you can reactivate it anytime in the benefit year following when you filed the claim.
Yes, inactive accounts (the status before becoming dormant) require a deposit or withdrawal to reactivate the account. The amount doesn't matter.
It means that the virus stays "hidden" and inactive in their bodies, instead of being completely destroyed, and then can later reactivate and cause new and sometimes different symptoms. This happens, for example, with the virus that causes chicken pox. Once it is inactive after the acute phase of that infection, it can stay that way in the body (in the nerve tissues in this example) for decades, and then reactivate and cause the nerve pain and rash that is called "Shingles" or "Herpes Zoster" later in life. It is also true that polio viruses can remain latent until decades later and then reactivate with weakness and other, sometimes debilitating, symptoms. Several viruses are able to become latent this way.
Yes. A Dormant Account is one which is inactive for a long period of time. The bank keeps it in Dormant or Inactive status to avoid malpractice or unauthorized activity in it. In such cases, the bank will not accept any deposits or issue payments from the account. They have all the right to refuse payments on a dormant account. The customer has to reactivate his/her account before they can perform transactions in it.
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inactive.
My sentence-making skills are currently inactive. It is safer to climb an inactive volcano. Your insurance policy is inactive.
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what are the examples of inactive and active volcanoes?
The inactive form of pepsin is called pepsinogen.