The Day of Doom by Michael Wigglesworth
God
a polaroid camera :)
Normally, when a judgment is paid in full, the judgment creditor gives the debtor the release of judgement (sometimes called a warrant of satisfaction). It is then up to the debtor to file or record it because he/she wants to make sure the lien is removed.
yes there is but I'm not sure what's called sorry
this pic gives me hope
If a judgment has been recorded against someone, that person must pay the person holding the judgment the full amount of the judgment plus interest unless some lesser amount is agreed upon. When te payment clears, the judgment holder gives a document called a Warrant of Satisfaction (or some similar term), which the debtor sends to the state office where the judgment is recorded. That office will file the Warrant and the judgment will be released. It is never "dismissed". It is just paid and satisfied.
it gives you bananas :)
An outstanding judgment is a court order that gives a creditor the legal right to collect from a debtor. As court judgments are a matter of public record, a creditor can report the judgment on the debtor's credit reports. An example of a judgment placed on a credit report would be a judgment for eviction. This judgment will remain on the credit report for seven years from the filing date.
No. It is neither vivid nor an adjective; it is the simple past tense form of a descriptive verb.To be an adjective, it has to modify a noun; to be vivid, it has to create a striking picture in the reader's imagination. 'Walked' does neither.An example of a vivid adjective would be 'rushing', as in rushing ants: it modifies the (plural) noun 'ants' and gives the reader a mental picture of an ant colony darting about at random.
A diagram is a picture that goes with text and usually gives an example of what is in the text in picture form.
yes
Lord Henry gives him a yellow book. In the Barnes and Nobles version of The Picture of Dorian Gray, it is stated at the very bottom of the page on 128 that it is a French book called A Rebours or translated into English as Against Nature, or Against the Grain.