acceptance of debt

Acceptance of Debt

Meaning in Bengali:

ঋণের গ্রহণ, ঋণের স্বীকার, ঋণের গ্রহণযোগ্যতা, ঋণের স্বীকার্যতা, ঋণের গ্রহণের প্রক্রিয়া

Part of Speech:

Noun

Pronunciation:

ak-sep-tuhns uhv det

Short Definition:

The act of acknowledging or agreeing to pay a debt or obligation.

ঋণ বা দায়িত্ব স্বীকার বা পরিপ্রেক্ষিত করার ক্রিয়া।

Synonyms:

Agreement, consent, approval, compliance, recognition

Antonyms:

Denial (অস্বীকার), refusal (প্রত্যাখ্যান), rejection (প্রত্যাখ্যান), dissent (অসম্মতি), disagreement (অসম্মতি)

Origin:

The word “acceptance” originated from the Latin word “acceptantia” which means “receiving.” It entered the English language in the late 16th century.

Nearby Words:

Accept, acceptability, acceptable, acceptably, acceptance of offer

Acceptance of Debt in Literature Quotes:

“Debt is the worst poverty.” – Thomas Fuller

“A small debt makes a man your debtor, a large one makes him your enemy.” – Seneca

“Before borrowing money from a friend, decide which you need most.” – American Proverb

“The man who never has money enough to pay his debts has too much of something else.” – James Lendall Basford

1. Acceptance of responsibility (দায়িত্ব গ্রহণ)

2. Acceptance of offer (প্রস্তাবের গ্রহণ)

3. Acceptance of terms (শর্তাদি গ্রহণ)

4. Acceptance of defeat (পরাজয়ের গ্রহণ)

Usage in American English:

In American English, “acceptance of debt” refers to the act of acknowledging or agreeing to pay a debt or obligation.

Usage in British English:

In British English, “acceptance of debt” has the same meaning as in American English, which is the act of acknowledging or agreeing to pay a debt or obligation.

Meaning in Different Languages:

Hindi: ऋण स्वीकृति (Rin Svīkṛti)

Nepali: ऋण स्वीकृति (Rina Svīkṛti)

Urdu: قرض کی قبولیت (Qarz Ki Qubooliyat)

Tamil: கடன் ஏற்கனவேகின்றது (Kaṭaṉ ēṟkaṉavēkiṉṟatu)

Telugu: పొందిన ప్రమాణం (Pondina Pramāṇaṁ)

Arabic: قبول الدين (Qubul Aldayn)

Chinese: 债务承认 (Zhàiwù Chéngrèn)

Japanese: 債務の受諾 (Saimu no Junaku)

Russian: Признание долга (Priznanie Dolga)

For more information, you can visit wikipedia.org, dictionary.com, and thefreedictionary.com.