Bond

  • 81Bond — verzinsliches Wertpapier; Rentenpapier; Anleihe; Obligation; Schuldverschreibung * * * Bọnd 〈m. 6; Wirtsch.〉 engl. u. amerikan. verzinsliche Schuldverschreibung [engl., „Schuldverschreibung“] * * * Bọnd, der; s, s [engl. bond < mengl. bond,… …

    Universal-Lexikon

  • 82Bond — /bɒnd/ (say bond) noun Alan, born 1938 in England, Australian businessman; Australian of the Year 1977; leader of syndicate which issued successful America s Cup challenge in 1983; bankrupted in 1992 and convicted of fraud in 1997. Alan Bond… …

  • 83bond — bound m. bond ; saut. expr. Prene la bala au bond, faire faus bond : prendre la balle au bond ; faire faux bond. voir bomb …

    Diccionari Personau e Evolutiu

  • 84bond — /bɒnd/ noun 1. a contract document promising to repay money borrowed by a company or by the government at a certain date, and paying interest at regular intervals 2. ♦ goods (held) in bond goods held by customs until duty has been paid ♦ entry of …

    Dictionary of banking and finance

  • 85bond — noun 1》 a thing used to tie or fasten things together.     ↘(bonds) physical restraints used to hold someone prisoner. 2》 a force or feeling that unites people. 3》 a binding agreement, especially one which commits someone to make a payment to… …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 86Bond — ♦ Arrangement of bricks in courses. (Wood, Margaret. The English Medieval House, 410) Related terms: Bond, English, Bond, English Garden Wall, Bond, Flemish, Bond, Header, Header, Stretcher …

    Medieval glossary

  • 87bond — An IOU issued by a borrower to a lender. Bonds usually take the form of fixed interest security issued by governments, local authorities, or companies. However, bonds come in many forms: with fixed or variable rates of interest, redeemable or… …

    Big dictionary of business and management

  • 88bond — In chemistry, the force holding two neighboring atoms in place and resisting their separation; a b. is electrovalent if it consists of the attraction between oppositely charged groups, or covalent if it results from the sharing of one, two, or… …

    Medical dictionary

  • 89Bond — Recorded as Bond, Bonde, Bonds, Bondar, Bounder, Bonder, Bundy, Bunday, and others, this famous and interesting surname is recorded in most European countries, but is considered to be of Anglo Scandanavian pre 7th century origins. It was at first …

    Surnames reference

  • 90bond — English has two distinct words bond, which started life very differently but have gradually grown together. Bond ‘something that binds’ [13] was originally the same word as band (from Old Norse band), and only gradually diverged from it in… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins