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foreclosed

/fawr-klohz, fohr-/US // fɔrˈkloʊz, foʊr- //UK // (fɔːˈkləʊz) //

被取消赎回权的,被拍卖的,被取消赎回权

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    fore·closed, fore·clos·ing.

    • : Law. to deprive of the right to redeem his or her property, especially on failure to make payment on a mortgage when due, ownership of property then passing to the mortgagee.to take away the right to redeem.
    • : to shut out; exclude; bar.
    • : to hinder or prevent, as from doing something.
    • : to establish an exclusive claim to.
    • : to close, settle, or answer beforehand.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    fore·closed, fore·clos·ing.

    • : to foreclose a mortgage or pledge.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Yet, unsurprisingly, with hopes for social change at home foreclosed and few economic alternatives, migration only increased after the wars ended.

  • After the Great Recession, millions of foreclosed homes hit the market as the economy cratered.

  • It’s worth noting that the majority opinion in Van Buren does not foreclose any possibility that someone will be prosecuted for a trivial transgression.

  • If it forecloses a young person getting a job, that has longer-run adverse implications for what we call their human capital accumulation.

  • Opportunity is going to be foreclosed to millions of low-income people because they can’t afford to gain access to the digital highway through Internet service providers.

  • Yet Texas does not foreclose professional opportunities for him.

  • When the stakes are as high as these, checking privilege can foreclose important advances in human psychology.

  • What they have done is foreclose any meaningful response by the AP.

  • We cannot foreclose the possibility that a strike against Iran might one day be defensible or necessary.

  • Why rush to foreclose on a homeowner owing $250,000 on a property valued, post-bubble, at $200,000?

  • They foreclose without mercy, but that does not frighten their old patrons, who have the perennial optimism of the country.

  • He's to foreclose that mortgage and longs to own that one field of ours just to complete the shape of his farm.

  • My husband died paying it, and my son will pay it all my life, and then I suppose the bank will foreclose.

  • Yesterday I served notice on him by mail that we would have to go ahead and foreclose right away.

  • Laflin came to Ingleside; came to foreclose a poor man's liberty, without a day of redemption.