Want this question answered?
hi
Yes. Credit means that you have overpaid and they owe you money.
It means that you owe money
nope because i dont owe him money nor do I even know the two of you.
If you still owe for 2006 taxes, probably not.
Depends on the context. It could mean that you owe 16.
hi
Yes. Then youll be paying extra money for interest. Get out of debt ASAP.
you owe them :(
Example: you, a debtor, owe me $10,000. I owe you $5,000. I can set off my debt to you, meaning that you cannot collect the $5,000 I owe you. Your debt to me is reduced to $5,000. The most common type of setoff involves a bank. Your deposits in a bank constitute the bank's obligation to you. If you owe the bank $100,000, and the bank has $5,000 in deposits from you, it can zap your $5,000, and now you owe the bank $95,000.
The meaning of "I owe you my all from now" is that the person saying that is willing to do anything forever to repay the person they're speaking to. This is a somewhat foolhardy promise to make.
The US owe us 350bn and thats all I know.
I am asking u...u guys should know this stuff i mean c'mon >:[
owe
Yes. Credit means that you have overpaid and they owe you money.
I don not know.
"Have to, must, owe" as a verb and "duty" as a noun are English equivalents of the Italian word dovere.Specifically, the Italian word can mean "have to, must" when it is used with an infinitive. It also can mean "owe" when it is used with a direct object. But it is as a masculine noun that it means "duty."Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation always is "doh-VEH-reh."