Due to the fact I lost my job, I ended up owing money to the credit card company.
The correct spelling of the conjunction is because (due to, owing to).
She deviated at the end of the basketball court.
Due
The correct spelling is indebted (owing, or grateful).
as, as a result of, as long as, as things go, being, by cause of, by reason of, by virtue of, considering, due to, for, for the reason that, for the sake of, in as much as, in behalf of, in that, in the interest of, in view of, is caused by, now that, on account of, on the grounds that, over, owing to, seeing, since, thanks to, through, whereas
Your bankruptcy attorney can help you add assessments due and owing up to the date of your filing. Assessments incurred post filing are due and owing.
The correct spelling of the conjunction is because (due to, owing to).
no
Very roughly.... A train is 'due' when it is about to arrive. Money is 'due' when it is owing to someone. In (almost) all other cases, 'do' is the verb for an action "Did you do your homework?" 'do' is also the way we ask some questions - "Do you like sugar in your coffee?" If you would say 'did' if the action happened already, then use 'do' if is happening or about to happen. - "I will do the dishes."
expected, scheduled, fitting, deserved, payable, outstanding, owing, unpaid
Others are : due to the fact and owing to the fact :-)
When I put the down payment on the new car, I will be owing less than half the purchase price.
The term is rather broadly use when only 11% of those owing is due to refusal. see link
no...federal grant money is for a proven need.
Yes, if the past-due amount does not exceed $2,500.
1201 is usually an offset due to owing back taxes, child support......etc.
Generally speaking "due to" acts as an adjective and is normally preceded by "be"the problem was due to...However, "because of" acts as an adverb and is normally preceded by a verbthe match was cancelled because of/owing to bad weather.