(n.) One who makes or gives a guaranty; a warrantor; a surety.
(n.) One who engages to secure another in any right or possession.
Example Sentences:
(1) For those who can't stump up more than 5% of the agreed price, he suggests guarantor mortgages, such as that offered by Lloyds TSB.
(2) The governor told business leaders in Edinburgh that Westminster would need to agree that the UK Treasury would help to bail out Scotland in any future financial crisis and act as a guarantor for Scotland's banks.
(3) And that’s just how Theresa May likes it | Martin Kettle Read more Russia was the guarantor of a 2013 deal under which Syria would remove all chemical weapons.
(4) They signed the contract over the loud protestations of Miura's sister-in-law, the guarantor.
(5) But the report didn't include mortgages where a parent acted as "guarantor".
(6) In Cairo, Obama touched on the broad issue of political change in a sclerotic Arab world whose rulers sold themselves as guarantors of stability and western interests.
(7) Remember, this was a time when women didn't have the right to equal pay, and couldn't get a mortgage without a male guarantor, and rape victims were at almost always to blame for having been raped.
(8) The downside, from the guarantor's point of view, is that he or she becomes liable for the mortgage if the borrower defaults on it.
(9) The need for more stringent gun controls is supported but their implications to the physician and especially the psychiatrist as a potential guarantor for a licence application ought to be further explored by the professional bodies involved.
(10) With the Co-operative bank, where it is possible to borrow 4.25 times a guarantor's gross income, you could potentially borrow £191,250.
(11) My father and stepmother have said that they could act as a guarantors for the mortgage.
(12) When the Syrian army attacks al-Nusra it is not as the suppressor of the popular movement, but the guarantor of the unity of Syria's diverse society.
(13) This is the difference between what a borrower could have afforded with a mortgage on his or her own earnings and what is actually being borrowed with a guarantor in place, plus 10%.
(14) Those are far more reliable guarantors of stability and security.
(15) Government as guarantor of rights may be more effective in health services than as provider of programs.
(16) Local public health departments traditionally have been supported as providers of preventive care and, in some jurisdictions, as guarantors of other essential services to vulnerable populations that usual providers do not reach.
(17) In unveiling the EU's " agenda for change " (pdf), Andris Piebalgs, the EU commissioner for development, said on Thursday that human rights and democracy were guarantors that economic development was sustainable.
(18) It was obvious that the main “guarantors” of the document were not the European diplomats, but their counterparts from across the ocean.
(19) Once the personal guarantor of national unity had been lynched by his compatriots, the Libyan people were left to their own devices in an appalling state of upheaval, with no roadmap to guide them.
(20) "Being a guarantor involves helping your child borrow a bit more by having your income in the background," says Hollingworth.
Hirer
Definition:
(n.) One who hires.
Example Sentences:
(1) And he also fears that some of the more unscrupulous operators might use this issue as “another excuse” to persuade hirers to take the firm’s expensive extra insurance.
(2) If the current trend continues towards every worker for themselves – the so-called “gig economy” – then government will need to look again at the UK’s employment laws to ensure they provide sufficient support for the individual against the dominant position of the hirer.
(3) Other car hirers this summer take note of this experience – and don't be one of the hundreds of complaints we get at the end of each summer.
(4) DVLA insists that the changes have been widely publicised but few people we contacted this week were aware of them, including frequent car hirers – and even people working close to the industry.
(5) But fears are growing that the “very muddled” introduction of the new rules will almost certainly lead to some hirers being turned away by car firms this summer.
(6) It couldn’t say what would happen to car hirers abroad as foreign hires are not part of its remit.
(7) MA, Newark We have all handed a car back to the hirer while anxious to get our flight.
(8) The British Vehicle Rental and Leasing Association which represents the car hire industry, says UK hirers unaware of the rule change will most likely be treated in the same way as those who currently turn up without both parts of the licence.
(9) However, under Italian law the company says it is obliged to pass on a hirer's address to the police in the event of a traffic offence, but is not privy to the details of the contravention.
(10) The code is only valid for 72 hours, which will mean that holidaymakers hiring a car in the second week of a foreign trip face having to find an internet cafe and log on abroad, or pay roaming charges, if they want to show the car hirer their record.
(11) The cafe waitresses, shop staff, mountain bike hirers and others at Grizedale greet him with broad grins.