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Definition of Bond issue
1. Noun. Bonds sold by a corporation or government agency at a particular time and identifiable by date of maturity.
Definition of Bond issue
1. Noun. (legal) The offering of bonds for sale to investors. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Bond Issue
Literary usage of Bond issue
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Supreme Court Reporter by Robert Desty, United States Supreme Court, West Publishing Company (1920)
"... the reorganized company, and before they had asserted any claim to the stock
in specie deposited such shares as collateral for a bond issue, held that, ..."
2. Accounting Theory and Practice by Roy Bernard Kester (1918)
"As compared with an additional issue of stock—common or preference shares, as
may best meet the situation—a bond issue may thus be ..."
3. Corporation Accounting by Robert Joseph Bennett (1916)
"Expenses of bond issue Many authorities consider the expenses incurred in the
floating of a bond issue as directly chargeable to the cost of the issue, ..."
4. South Eastern Reporter by West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, West Publishing Company, South Carolina Supreme Court (1920)
"Counties <S= 178—Legislature may authorize county bond Issue ... The General
Assembly may authorize a •county bond issue without first submitting the ..."
5. Bond Market Development in Asia by OECD Staff, Oecd, (Paris) Organisation for Economic Co-ope (2001)
"which will follow below, about characteristics of a bond issue and its issuer
are unique to de facto benchmark issues because they are corporate, ..."
6. General Explanation of Tax Legislation Enacted in 1998: Report of the Joint edited by William Roth, Bill Archer (2000)
"Administrative appeal of adverse IRS determination of a bond issue's tax-exempt
status (sec. 3105 of the Act) Present and Prior Law A State or local ..."
7. The Financial Policy of Corporations by Arthur Stone Dewing (1920)
"Superficially the legal form of a bond issue may seem to present conditions of
... In reality, the legal rights and privileges with which the bond issue is ..."