To take up (an idea) as one's own.
1 But companies and governments need to borrow to expand and support growth.
2 To borrow the words of the prime minister herself: enough is enough.
3 Moreover, she refused to allow children to borrow the books they wanted.
4 I'll borrow another example from my friend Bruce Goldberg: your caloric consumption.
5 Quite another to borrow money to fund a bloated, inept, patronage-driven state.
6 Merely allow me to borrow her without challenge in your own past.
7 In China, however, many buyers also borrow to cover their down payments.
8 I would go to someone's house and ask: can I borrow that?
9 But the euro crisis has made it harder to borrow from abroad.
10 They only call on her, however, when they wish to borrow money.
11 Is it fair to borrow another' food culture for one's own ends?
12 That's why the Clean Energy Project wants to borrow your PC power.
13 However, at times, the rhetoric appears to borrow heavily from antisemitic tropes.
14 This is a long way to come to borrow books, isn't it?
15 Last year, British government had to borrow £156bn more than it spent.
16 Kiwirail will borrow seventy five million dollars to buy the new locomotives.
Другие примеры для термина "borrow"
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Об этом термине Глагол
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Borrow в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки