¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Installments
1. installment [n] - See also: installment
Lexicographical Neighbors of Installments
Literary usage of Installments
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Congressional Globe by United States Congress, Francis Preston Blair, John Cook Rives, George A. Bailey, Franklin Rives (1857)
"For second of ten installments as annuity, to be expended in the purchase of such
... For two thirds of sixteenth of twenty-five installments in money, ..."
2. The American and English Encyclopedia of Law by John Houston Merrill, Charles Frederic Williams, Thomas Johnson Michie, David Shephard Garland (1893)
"Bale by Installments.—Rugg ;>. Moore, no Pa. St. 236. But see contra on the ground
that the breach did not extend to the whole consideration, Os- good i>. ..."
3. American Law of Real Estate Agency: Including the Duties and Liabilities of by William Slee Walker (1922)
"Payment in installments. .Where a vendor agreed to pay his agent's commissions
for selling the land out of the purchase money as it was paid in ..."
4. Forms of Pleading in Actions for Legal Or Equitable Relief: Prepared with by Austin Abbott, Carlos Coolidge Alden (1898)
"That defendant has not paid any part of the installments of dollars, each coming due
... 91. all installments due at the time of bring- This action ..."
5. A Treatise on Commercial Paper and the Negotiable Instruments Law: Including by James Webster Eaton, Frank Bixby Gilbert (1903)
"Payment in installments.— We have already seen that certainty as to the sum
payable by a negotiable instrument is not affected by the fact that it is ..."
6. The Practice at Law, in Equity, and in Special Proceedings in All the Courts by William Wait (1874)
"Effect of insufficient statement — Judgment payable in installments. it is ...
Judgment payable in installments. A judgment may be entered for a debt which ..."
7. A Treatise on the Bankruptcy Law of the United States by Harold Remington (1915)
"But bankruptcy has been held not to operate as an anticipatory breach of a
continuing contract to buy, as to future installments of goods.20 And where a ..."