borrow

pedir emprestado
definition
verb
he had borrowed a car from one of his colleagues
take and use (something that belongs to someone else) with the intention of returning it.
noun
I played the round in the company of an ancient caddie, unusually talkative for a Scot, who shaped the sightlines of the present to the borrow of the past.
a slope or other irregularity on a golf course that must be compensated for when playing a shot.
translation of 'borrow'
verb
pedir emprestado
example
She had mostly kept to herself, venturing only to the library to 'borrow' books.
lower interest rates will make it cheaper for individuals to 'borrow'
This will be an opportunity for people of all ages to 'borrow' books and spend time in the Library during opening hours.
Though he does not have to study at the library, he comes regularly to 'borrow' books.
She pointed out that it costs nothing for teenagers to join the library and 'borrow' books, CDs, videos and tapes from the new multimedia section for their age group.
Sixty-eight, seventy-eight, eighty-eight then 'borrow' the three.
By joining your local lending library, you can 'borrow' several books at a time without charge, unless you return them late and get fined.
She said one man called in complaining that he is jobless, cannot 'borrow' money from banks, relatives and friends, and has no method to clear his debts.
My family will visit the library often to 'borrow' new books to read together.
If we continue the investigation we have: From this point on, we have to 'borrow' a ten in order to make the ‘units’ have the 2 digits needed for the next Fibonacci number.
I'll just 'borrow' some clothes and return them later.
It provides financial assistance to people that cannot afford to 'borrow' money from commercial banks because of the conditions required.
After breakfast I had a long shower then we walked over the hill so that i could 'borrow' books.
If you know how much you need to 'borrow' and you don't foresee any need to borrow again, a straight home equity loan is probably the way to go.
to meet this deficit the government has to 'borrow' money
I played the round in the company of an ancient caddie, unusually talkative for a Scot, who shaped the sightlines of the present to the 'borrow' of the past.
This hole provides a challenge: the right is nothing but trouble and the huge green has both slope and 'borrow' to conclude a fine golf hole.
At the end of the 20-30 minute session, mothers are able to peruse parenting resources provided by the library and 'borrow' picture books with the babies.
Jim did not beg, steal or 'borrow' his business acumen - his father Seamus is the well-known Bagenalstown auctioneer and businessman.
The reason they can do that is that trading banks actually 'borrow' large sums of money, and they are able to put up for taxation purposes the interest they pay on it.
The best he could do was 'borrow' concepts and words from other disciplines.
Space is all very well, in the right place, but people come to libraries mainly to 'borrow' books.
But at Storr his great achievement has been to 'borrow' the landscape and return it to us in an entirely new light.
Can't they just 'borrow' from the bank?
Whereas some artists cop out and simply 'borrow' a hook from an old jazz or blues record then slap a techno/trip-hop beat on it, Tobin's approach is more subtle and complex.
There's always some kind of 'borrow' , and even bad golfers can mis-putt and make it if they have mis-read the borrow.
The combined effect of these trends has been to lift the amount which a two-earner household on average earnings can afford to 'borrow' without debt-servicing absorbing more than one quarter of their income.
But give it a few more listens, and they're begging to 'borrow' the album and return it six months later.
Of these states 26 are borrowers, and 21 do not 'borrow' from the Bank.
lower interest rates will make it cheaper for individuals to 'borrow'
Credits: Google Translate