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Từ điển Việt Anh Việt 4in1 - English Vietnamese 4 in 1 Dictionary
loan
I.loan1 S2 W2 /ləʊn $ loʊn/ BrE AmE noun [Date: 1100-1200; Language: Old Norse; Origin: lan] 1. [countable] an amount of money that you borrow from a bank etc loan of a loan of £60,000 I had to take out a loan to buy my car. It’ll be years before we’ve paid off the loan. 2. [singular] when you lend something to someone loan of Thanks for the loan of your camera. 3. on loan (from somebody/something) if something or someone is on loan, they have been borrowed: The book I wanted was out on loan. paintings on loan from the Louvre Cantona initially went on loan to Leeds United. • • • COLLOCATIONS verbs ▪ take out a loan (=borrow money) Most home buyers take out a loan. ▪ repay/pay off/pay back a loan (=give back the money you borrowed, usually over a period of time) You can repay the loan early without a penalty. ▪ give somebody a loan I hoped to persuade my bank manager to give us a loan. ▪ make a loan (=give someone a loan) Banks are cautious about making new loans. ▪ ask for/apply for a loan He asked his father for a loan. ▪ get a loan She got a loan from the bank. ▪ secure a loan (on something) (=agree to give the lender something if you do not pay back the loan on time) The loan was secured on his home. ADJECTIVES/NOUN + loan ▪ a £20,000/$5,000 etc loan The company asked for a £100,000 loan. ▪ a bank loan (=money lent by a bank) What is the interest you will pay on a bank loan? ▪ a home/car loan (=a loan to buy a home or a car) They took out a thirty-year home loan. ▪ a personal loan (=money lent to a person, rather than a company) If you want money for a specific purchase, you can get a personal loan. ▪ a business loan (=money lent to a business) The bank offers a range of business loans to meet the needs of small businesses. ▪ a student loan (=money lent to a student to pay for university) Many college graduates are paying off huge student loans. ▪ a long-term/short-term loan (=to be paid back after a long/short time) I intended the money as a short-term loan. ▪ an interest-free loan (=on which you pay no interest) They offer an interest-free loan for two years. ▪ a low-interest loan a low-interest loan to the country from the International Development Association loan + NOUN ▪ a loan repayment your monthly loan repayments ▪ a loan agreement (=that says how much the loan will be, how much you will pay back each month etc) Read the terms of your loan agreement carefully. • • • THESAURUS ▪ loan noun [countable] an amount of money that is borrowed, especially from a bank or company, which you agree to pay back by the end of a period of time: We took out a loan to buy a new car. | He is paying back a $50,000 loan. ▪ mortgage noun [countable] a large amount of money that someone borrows from a bank or company to buy a house: Nick told me the mortgage on his apartment is worth about $90,000. | Anyone taking out a mortgage should be aware that interest rates can go up at any time. | It took my parents nearly thirty years to pay off their mortgage. ▪ interest noun [uncountable] money that you pay for borrowing money, especially that you pay every year or every month at a fixed rate: Credit companies charge huge amounts of interest. | What’s the interest on the loan? ▪ overdraft noun [countable] British English the amount of money that you owe to bank when you have spent more money than you had in your account: I left university with no job and a big overdraft. | 20% of the bank’s customers regularly use their overdraft facility. | You have to pay a fee for unauthorized overdrafts. ▪ debt noun [uncountable and countable] an amount of money that a person or organization owes: The company now has debts of almost £2 million. | A lot of the money went towards paying his debts. | The family were $100,000 in debt (=they owed $100,000). ▪ credit noun [uncountable] an arrangement with a shop or bank that allows you to buy something and pay for it later: We bought the furniture on credit. | He had a credit limit of £7,000. II.loan2 BrE AmE verb [transitive] 1. American English to lend someone something, especially money loan somebody something Can you loan me $5? Jeff’s loaned us his car for the weekend. 2. (also loan out British English) to lend something valuable to someone: The National Library has loaned several manuscripts. loan something to somebody/something Two of the steam trains have been loaned to other railways.
〆 d. Chim phượng mái. 〆 đg. "Loan báo" nói tắt: Loan tin.
◎ | [loan] | | ■ | phoenix | | ■ | announce; make known | | ☆ | loan tin | | spread the news far and wide, promulgate, blaze | | ■ | royal carriage (xe loan) |
loanhu◎ | [loun] | ※ | danh từ | | ■ | tiền cho vay; vật cho mượn | | ☆ | I'm asking for a loan - I'll pay you back | | Tôi chỉ hỏi vay thôi, rồi tôi sẽ hoàn lại cho anh | | ☆ | a bank loan | | một khoản vay ở ngân hàng | | ☆ | may I have the loan of your bicycle? | | tôi mượn xe đạp của anh được không? | | ☆ | can we ask your father for the loan of his car? | | chúng tôi hỏi mượn bố anh chiếc xe được không? | | ☆ | It's not my book - I've got it on loan from the library | | Đó không phải là quyển sách của tôi - tôi mượn của thư viện đấy | ※ | ngoại động từ | | ■ | cho vay; cho mượn | | ☆ | a painting graciously loaned by Her Majesty the Queen | | một bức tranh được Đức Nữ hoàng có lòng tốt cho mượn |
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