throw
means you go down on me and I owe you one.
'6 percent tax' can mean 2 things, depending whether or not the tax is inclusive. If it is not inclusive it means that you owe a further 6% of whatever your buying/receiving. For example if you're buying something for £100 and VAT (at 6%) is not included you would owe £6 to the tax man. If it is inclusive it means that 6% of whatever your buying/receiving. If you are buying something for £50 and VAT is included (at 6%) 6% would be paid to the tax man for you.
The integer number of dollars that you owe your friend is 19. A strange question!
Oh, dude, total means to add up all the numbers. It's like when you're at a restaurant and the bill comes, you total up all the food and drinks you ordered to figure out how much you owe. So, yeah, total is all about adding, not subtracting.
a 68 - she goes down on you and you owe her one!
throw
mow show
Debes means "to owe".
The Latin word 'debebis' is the second person singular of the future indicative tense. It comes from the infinitive 'debere', which means to 'owe'. The conjugation of the verb 'debere' in the future indicative tense is as follows: debebo, as '[I] will owe'; debebis, as '[you] will owe'; debebit, as '[he/she/it] will owe'; debebimus, as '[we] will owe'; debebitis, as '[you all] will owe'; and debebunt, as '[they] will owe'.
The word "owe" is a verb.
You don't owe me anything for this answer.
She said that they owe her two dollars for that book. I owe, I owe; so it's off to work I go.
twyndyllyngs - means twins (you owe me for this one - it took well over 2 hours to hunt this word down!)
The word arrears means behind or past. Most people who owe someone money, lets say for child support will go to jail for what they owe in arrears. So it would mean something you owe from the past.
A verb is an action word. A letter that when you say it, means of debt is the letter O. If you are in debt, you owe somebody something.
The Malayalam word paradooshanam means calumny
This question is one of them :) abstract means not concrete, and may be influenced by context. "Are you rich?" an abstract question (because of the abstracting word RICH. I don't owe any money to any one means I am rich, vs I have 1 million (but may owe 2 to others)