Bankrupt or Insolvent
A homograph for "wound" is "wound," which can refer to being injured or can also mean winding something up (like a clock).
If the subsidiary is a partnership, then it will wound up. otherwise like any other propert it has to be sold out.
The idiom "wound up" has 3 distinct meanings:1. (adj) excited, or needing to release tension (He was all wound up before the game)2. (verb) finally did something (I wound up running away.)3. (verb) arrived at a destination or location (We wound up in Miami.)
When a solider comes home from serving overseas and has a wound that is infected it is important to document how the wound was made. International trauma is asked in case of foreign material being used in the care of the wound.
No.
Yes, a wound-up spring possesses potential energy due to the stored mechanical energy from being wound up. This potential energy can be converted into kinetic energy when the spring unwinds and moves.
a wound of not being happy
To lacerate means to make a deep cut or wound.
I wound my self up when I as skipping with my friends All the girls wound up for a fight.
The past tense of "wind up" is "wound up." For example, "She wound up her business last year."
The likely term is the phrase "wrapped up" (finished, or literally wrapped, as with a gift).The idiomatic use is to mean absorbed, preoccupied, e.g. wrapped up in his work.
the wound is letting off blood