recourse - use in sentences

Converse of object

  • have: The Sheriffs in their turn had frequent recourse to the Mayor's Court.
  • seek: Provide users with information on how to seek recourse if they encounter problems.
  • avoid: It was the only way to avoid recourse to force.
  • take: Your best choice is to take recourse of the contrast disks.
  • require: It is a card of balance and harmony; if there is imbalance, the correction may require recourse to the law.
  • allow: This initial written permission stage would allow recourse to an oral hearing if required by the defendant.

Preposition: against

  • member: Presumably, such persons then know that recourse against LLC members is limited.

Converse of subject

  • explain: The few cases that are better documented can be explained by recourse to the mechanisms of everyday physics.

Adjective modifier

  • frequent: The Sheriffs in their turn had frequent recourse to the Mayor's Court.
  • ultimate: If that fails then the only ultimate recourse would be to Judicial Review in the High Court.
  • constant: That, constant overwork, constant recourse to adrenaline rather than sleep, meant that power was an undiluted additive.
  • legal: She saw little legal recourse for the victims of abuse.
  • little: She saw little legal recourse for the victims of abuse.
  • automatic: Those who had advocated the automatic recourse to the use of force had agreed to afford Iraq a final chance, he said.

Modifies a noun

  • factoring: When the risk of bad debts remains with you the service is referred to as recourse factoring.
  • debt: If a loan to an LLC does not qualify as recourse debt, the tax rules call it " non-recourse debt.
  • variable: Recourse variables would represent the liquidation ( selling ) of assets to meet liabilities.
  • agreement: Under a recourse agreement, your company bears the risk of bad debts; with a non-recourse agreement, the factor absorbs any losses.
  • financing: The aim is to develop financial models and optimum transaction and contractual structures that will facilitate the raising of limited recourse project financing.

Preposition: for

  • funding: The first recourse for funding should be to your own institution ( where applicable ).

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.