revocable

  • 21revocable trust — see trust Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. revocable trust …

    Law dictionary

  • 22Revocable Line Of Credit — A source of credit provided to an individual or business by a bank or financial institution, which can be revoked or annulled at the lender s discretion or under specific circumstances. A bank or financial institution may revoke a line of credit… …

    Investment dictionary

  • 23revocable letter of credit — Assurance of funds issued by a bank that can be canceled at any time without prior notification to the beneficiary. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * revocable letter of credit revocable letter of credit ➔ letter of credit …

    Financial and business terms

  • 24Revocable Beneficiary — The ability of a policy owner either to change who will receive the compensation from his or her policy or to terminate the policy without having to get consent from the current beneficiary. Most life insurance policies have this feature. This is …

    Investment dictionary

  • 25Revocable Trust — A trust whereby provisions can be altered or canceled dependent on the grantor. During the life of the trust, income earned is distributed to the grantor, and only after death does property transfer to the beneficiaries. Also referred to as a… …

    Investment dictionary

  • 26revocable — revocability, revocableness, n. revocably, adv. /rev euh keuh beuhl/ or, often, /ri voh /, adj. that may be revoked. Also, revokable /ri voh keuh beuhl, rev euh /. [1490 1500; < L revocabilis. See REVOKE, ABLE] * * * …

    Universalium

  • 27revocable — re|vo|ca|ble Mot Pla Adjectiu invariable …

    Diccionari Català-Català

  • 28revocable — rev·o·ca·ble || revÉ™kÉ™bl adj. can be revoked, can be canceled, can be annulled, retractable …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 29revocable — rev·o·ca·ble …

    English syllables

  • 30revocable — rev•o•ca•ble [[t]ˈrɛv ə kə bəl[/t]] or, often, [[t]rɪˈvoʊ [/t]] also re•vok•a•ble [[t]rɪˈvoʊ kə bəl[/t]] adj. capable of being revoked • Etymology: 1490–1500; &LT; L revocābilis. See revoke, able …

    From formal English to slang