obligor|obligors in English

noun

[ob·li·gor || ‚ɑblɪ'gɔr /‚ɒblɪ'gɔː]

guarantor; person who receives an obligation (Law); person who is obligated

Use "obligor|obligors" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "obligor|obligors" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "obligor|obligors", or refer to the context using the word "obligor|obligors" in the English Dictionary.

1. This obligor assumes the buyer's periodic payment obligation.

2. "Surety" includes a guarantor or other secondary obligor.

3. 14 "Surety" includes a guarantor or other secondary obligor.

4. Con and the Latin cum are equivalent, as, Co-executors, Co-obligor

5. A business method is chartered by a defined group of competing independent buyer/obligor companies (102), to acquire or finance receivables (106) of the buyer/obligor companies (102).

6. To learn more about Assignees, assignors, and obligors in an assignments, review the accompanying lesson on these roles

7. The second program, the Arrears Liquidation Program, is designed to liquidate state-owed Arrears by allowing obligors to pay off

8. To some extent, obligor represents static safety, while assignee represents dynamic safety of dealing.

9. When the assignment is invalid, obligor has the right to restitute from assignee those obligor gives to the assignee and in theory the right is the claim of property right or unjust enrichment.

10. If such a receivable is assigned, the obligor is the “account debtor” and the obligee is the “assignor”.

11. the underlying obligation and reference obligation share the same obligor and have legally enforceable cross‐default or cross‐acceleration clauses;

12. Depending on the classification of the country in which the obligor/guarantor is domiciled, it is likely that an obligor/guarantor classified in buyer risk category CC0 would be rated between AAA (Country Category 1) and B (Country Category 7) by accredited CRAs.

13. the underlying obligation and reference obligation share the same obligor and have legally enforceable cross-default or cross-acceleration clauses

14. Depending on the classification of the country in which the obligor/guarantor is domiciled, it is likely that an obligor/guarantor classified in buyer risk category CC4 would be rated between BB+ (Country Category 1) and B- or worse (Country Category 5) by accredited CRAs.

15. The obligor/guarantor has a limited susceptibility to adverse effects of changes in circumstances and economic conditions.

16. Depending on the classification of the country in which the obligor/guarantor is domiciled, it is likely that an obligor/guarantor classified in buyer risk category CC1 would be rated between AAA (Country Category 1) and B (Country Category 7) by accredited CRAs.

17. Depending on the classification of the country in which the obligor/guarantor is domiciled, it is likely that an obligor/guarantor classified in buyer risk category CC3 would be rated between BBB+ (Country Category 1) and B- or worse (Country Category 6) by accredited CRAs.

18. Depending on the classification of the country in which the obligor/guarantor is domiciled, it is likely that an obligor/guarantor classified in buyer risk category CC2 would be rated between A+ (Country Category 1) and B- or worse (Country Category 7) by accredited CRAs.

19. Depending on the classification of the country in which the obligor/guarantor is domiciled, it is likely that an obligor/guarantor classified in buyer risk category CC5 would be rated between BB- (Country Category 1) and B- or worse (Country Category 4) by accredited CRAs.

20. In this example, A is both the “assignor” and the “delegee” who delegates the duties to another (C), C is known as the “obligor” who must perform the obligations to the Assignee, and B is the “Assignee” who is owed duties and is liable to the “obligor

21. the underlying obligation and reference obligation share the same obligor and have legally enforceable cross-default or cross-acceleration clauses;

22. An Acceding Borrower may liquidate or dissolve, or merge or consolidate with another Person, or sell, lease, transfer, or otherwise dispose of all or substantially all of its assets to another Obligor, so long as, in each case (i) an Obligor is the surviving entity of any such liquidation,

23. (ii) the underlying obligation and reference obligation share the same obligor and have legally enforceable cross-default or cross-acceleration clauses;

24. ‘Assignment results in the transfer from the assignor to the third-party Assignee of the right to proceed directly against the debtor or obligor.’

25. The child support Computation form is the legal document used to calculate the child support obligation for a noncustodial parent (obligor) as required pursuant to Section 120 of Title 43 of the Oklahoma Statutes