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6 definitions found

From: DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典

 loan /ˈlon/
 貸款,借出,債權人(vt.)(vi.)借,供應貨款,借給

From: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

 Loan, n.
 1. The act of lending; a lending; permission to use; as, the loan of a book, money, services.
 2. That which one lends or borrows, especially a sum of money lent at interest; as, he repaid the loan.
 Loan office. (a) An office at which loans are negotiated, or at which the accounts of loans are kept, and the interest paid to the lender. (b) A pawnbroker's shop.

From: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

 Loan n.  A loanin. [Scot.]

From: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

 Loan, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Loaned p. pr. & vb. n. Loaning.] To lend; -- sometimes with out.
    By way of location or loaning them out.   --J. Langley (1644).
 

From: WordNet (r) 2.0

 loan
      n 1: the temporary provision of money (usually at interest)
      2: a word borrowed from another language; e.g. `blitz' is a
         German word borrowed into modern English [syn: loanword]
      v : give temporarily; let have for a limited time; "I will lend
          you my car"; "loan me some money" [syn: lend] [ant: borrow]

From: Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary

 Loan
    The Mosaic law required that when an Israelite needed to borrow,
    what he asked was to be freely lent to him, and no interest was
    to be charged, although interest might be taken of a foreigner
    (Ex. 22:25; Deut. 23:19, 20; Lev. 25:35-38). At the end of seven
    years all debts were remitted. Of a foreigner the loan might,
    however, be exacted. At a later period of the Hebrew
    commonwealth, when commerce increased, the practice of exacting
    usury or interest on loans, and of suretiship in the commercial
    sense, grew up. Yet the exaction of it from a Hebrew was
    regarded as discreditable (Ps. 15:5; Prov. 6:1, 4; 11:15; 17:18;
    20:16; 27:13; Jer. 15:10).
      Limitations are prescribed by the law to the taking of a
    pledge from the borrower. The outer garment in which a man slept
    at night, if taken in pledge, was to be returned before sunset
    (Ex. 22:26, 27; Deut. 24:12, 13). A widow's garment (Deut.
    24:17) and a millstone (6) could not be taken. A creditor could
    not enter the house to reclaim a pledge, but must remain outside
    till the borrower brought it (10, 11). The Hebrew debtor could
    not be retained in bondage longer than the seventh year, or at
    farthest the year of jubilee (Ex. 21:2; Lev. 25:39, 42), but
    foreign sojourners were to be "bondmen for ever" (Lev.
    25:44-54).