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  1. Dictionary
    equity
    /ˈɛkwɪti/

    noun

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Jun 11, 2020 · Overview . In law, the term "equity" refers to a particular set of remedies and associated procedures involved with civil law. These equitable doctrines and procedures are distinguished from "legal" ones. While legal remedies typically involve monetary damages, equitable relief typically refers to injunctions, specific performance, or vacatur.

  3. Jun 11, 2020 · So "at law" would be the contrast to "in equity". That means "at law" here would mean "common law". But Black's law dictionary says for "action at law": A civil suit stating a legal cuase of action and seeking only a legal remedy." For "suit at law" it says: A suit conducted according to the common law or equity, as distinguished from statutory ...

  4. Jan 29, 2008 · Je devrais ajouter (par esprit d'escalier ) que "equity research" signifiait, quand on a commencé à employer cette tournure, une estimation de la valeur des actions d'une entreprises qui n'étaient pas des instruments de dette ("bonds" "preferred stock") et qui n'avaient pas, alors, une valeur fixe en comparaison aux avoirs réels de l'entreprise.

  5. Jan 30, 2020 · What does equity rally mean here? “The impacts of the war and the pandemic are hard to disentangle in market and economy charts, but it looks like positive developments in the war … were overshadowed by the pandemic, marking the end of an equity rally,” he wrote. Source...

  6. Mar 17, 2016 · Mar 17, 2016. #3. 'Quite' has different meanings and in the absence of context it is difficult to know why they said what they said. However, it is possible to say 'This is not quite the conversation I was expecting', meaning that the speaker was expecting a conversation of a slightly different nature. This is often used as a figure of speech ...

  7. Jan 22, 2014 · I was lazy yesterday / I was being lazy yesterday. ==> Crucial difference between am and am being in the present. Insignificant difference in the past. You're impolite / You're being impolite. He thought I was impolite / He thought I was being impolite. ==> Exactly the same essential difference between are and are being as in was and was being.

  8. May 25, 2010 · USA English. May 26, 2010. #19. In any event, the use of initials for such honorifics is totally mystifying in AE, except perhaps for the diplomatic corps. Speaking as one who has served in the military and never been entrusted with anything diplomatic, my first response to "H.E." is "high explosive."

  9. Apr 7, 2015 · Apr 7, 2015. #6. I would say that the distinction is much more straightforward. They are mirror terms: "Let" is what the owner of a property does when they allow someone else to use it in return for money ("rent" as noun). "Rent" (as verb) is what someone does when paying someone else for the use of their property.

  10. Aug 25, 2005 · Hi, like „Scheibenkleister“, „Scheibe“ is used as Euphemism. In this spelling. It is just by chance that the spelling looks similar. You start „Schei“ ... think and continue „be“ instead of „ße“. Quite common. It is like F*ck without „u“. Also an Euphemism. Last edited: Aug 11, 2017. T.

  11. Apr 30, 2014 · California. English - US. Apr 30, 2014. #2. Where are you thinking of using these, or where have you seen them used? EA is short for 'each', and so has a meaning different from that of unit. In some contexts you might use either one of them, in other contexts, only one or the other is suitable.

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