English to Spanish Dictionary guarantors

guarantors

Garantes
definition
noun
the role of the police as guarantors of public order
a person, organization, or thing that guarantees something.
translation of 'guarantors'
noun
garante,
fiador
example
I have listened to several conference calls addressing the myriad issues associated with the financial 'guarantors' (credit insurers).
They and the public databases are the 'guarantors' of the human genome.
His veterans were settled on confiscated land (especially in Campania and Etruria) as 'guarantors' of his order.
This is generally taken to cover situations in which banks may be liable to borrowers and potential borrowers, to the shareholders, directors, creditors, and 'guarantors' of borrowers and potential borrowers, and even to other lenders.
So far, we have not referred to the practice of landlords requiring a tenant or assignee of a lease to provide 'guarantors' or sureties for his performance of the covenants in the lease.
The presentation of virtue or triumph rivaled rank in importance, for the great were also the 'guarantors' of right order.
The third party claim amounts to the 'guarantors' asserting a claim and that is not permissible.
The possibility of state responsibility is not precluded, but the scheme of these civil liability treaties involves states only as 'guarantors' of the operators' strict liability, or in providing additional compensation funds.
Kings emerged from the seventeenth-century crisis as secular 'guarantors' of political and social order, along the lines of Thomas Hobbes's social contract theory.
The second defendants are sued as 'guarantors' of the cargo's proportion of general average, but the proceedings have not been served on them.
The committee organises 'guarantors' to release candidates.
There was initially a view put by the respondents who were 'guarantors' of the tenant's obligations that indeed a new lease came into existence as a result of those negotiations.
For example, democratic thinking, particularly within the liberal tradition, contains conceptions of rights as freedom of action and also of rights as 'guarantors' of security.
Given that several states had held blacks in slavery for generations, the states no longer seemed like the primary 'guarantors' of liberty.
I should also say the position was that all the beneficiaries were also 'guarantors' .
So, under the common law, as your Honours know, if a guarantee was to be given by two 'guarantors' and one did not sign, then it is not binding on the other.
Should a problem materialise within a specified period of time after purchase, the 'guarantor' usually undertakes to repair or replace the product free of charge.
But if our military is the only 'guarantor' against a total breakdown how can its presence be counterproductive?
Morale and enthusiasm were high and the number of new people soared despite the insistence on having a proper 'guarantor' in order to be admitted to the dojo.
But it was also thought of as a 'guarantor' of common liberties.
The prince thus formed the capstone on the edifice of privilege, the ultimate 'guarantor' of the social hierarchy.
They still dreamed of a decentralized provincial order in which the privileges of the ancient estates would be cocooned, but now the monarchy was seen not as the enemy of that order but as its 'guarantor' .
That is, they saw the structural constitution as itself a 'guarantor' of rights.
Limited numbers of lightly armed troops are introduced and situated between the combatants, and they provide a symbolic 'guarantor' of the peace.
In Ohio a 'guarantor' is a surety and has the statutory and common law rights and obligations discussed above under Accommodation Party.
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