释义 |
indenturein‧den‧ture /ɪnˈdentʃə $ -ər/ noun [countable, uncountable] - But for now you stay here, examine the indenture, reflect on what you have said.
- If the bond is publicly marketed, a trustee is named to monitor and ensure compliance with the terms of the indenture.
- No one expects the petition to amend the indenture to Barnes' will to get a court hearing before June.
- The bond indenture normally specifies a number of restrictive covenants to which the issuing corporation must adhere.
- The coupon rate is thus the interest rate stated in the bond indenture.
- Then he offered his alternative: masters should insist on such huge indentures that Negroes would be in virtual slavery after baptism.
- There was only one benefit, he found, in the new indenture and that was an extended term.
- Too much attention, he added, was given to obtaining indentures and too little to the quality of the training.
a formal contract, especially in the past, between an apprentice and his master (=employer), or the act of arranging this—indentured adjective: indentured servants |