How to Use come due in a Sentence
come due
idiom-
Now the basics are back in charge, and the bill’s come due.
— Shawn Tully, Fortune, 16 Nov. 2023 -
There were costs from building that bomb, and the bill has come due.
— Kate Holland, ABC News, 28 July 2023 -
Disagreements stem from who will bear the brunt of the loss and when the bill will come due.
— Laine Higgins, WSJ, 9 Dec. 2020 -
Payments come due in May, and that’s when the moment of truth arrives.
— Erin Prater, Fortune, 24 Apr. 2022 -
And more than half of those business loans don’t come due before 2030.
— Shawn Tully, Fortune, 16 Nov. 2023 -
The bill that fiscal hawks have been warning about will come due in the near future if no changes are made.
— The Editors, National Review, 3 Aug. 2023 -
Instead, the principal and interest will come due all at once at the end of the loan's term.
— Becca Stanek, The Week, 19 Dec. 2022 -
After a three-year break, student loan payments are about to come due again.
— Tara Siegel Bernard, New York Times, 1 June 2023 -
At some point, even with the Niners handling the salary cap as well as any team in the league, the bills will come due on the team’s top players, and the core will need to change.
— Dieter Kurtenbach, The Mercury News, 13 Feb. 2024 -
It’s not known how many tenants have been unable to meet their obligations for the three months of rent that have come due so far.
— Alexei Koseff, SFChronicle.com, 10 June 2020 -
The bill has come due for the way major colleges have over-spent on college athletics.
— oregonlive, 9 July 2020 -
However, Klarman expects the debt to come due at some point.
— Jacob Wolinsky, Forbes, 28 Jan. 2022 -
Meaning that funds for infrastructure were not put aside for many, many years and now that bill has come due.
— Thomas Goodwin Smith, Baltimore Sun, 5 May 2023 -
Additional challenges come due to the age of many of these objects.
— Justin Klawans, The Week, 12 Oct. 2022 -
The office warned that the number of defaults on pandemic loans could increase over the next two years as payments come due.
— Alan Rappeport, New York Times, 27 June 2023 -
The difference is hard to decipher when the bills come due, which happens faster than usual under the new league rules.
— Jimmy Watkins, cleveland, 15 July 2023 -
Because the deposits come due sooner than the loans, no bank could repay all its depositors in the short run.
— William M. Isaac, WSJ, 28 Mar. 2023 -
But when loan payments come due again, likely this summer, some of these startups may find their moment to grow has come.
— Amanda Hoover, WIRED, 6 Mar. 2023 -
The loan is about to come due, and Leya rightly suspects Marcus is just going to let the deadline elapse and gobble up her company.
— John Anderson, WSJ, 6 Apr. 2021 -
Those bills come due on June 6, shortly after the June 1 deadline after which Yellen says Treasury could default on its debt.
— Medora Lee, USA Today, 17 May 2023 -
Hanesbrands this month refinanced debt that would have come due next year with high-yield bond and leveraged loan offerings.
— Ian King, Fortune, 24 Feb. 2023 -
After more than two years of deferrals, the first EIDL loan monthly payments have started to come due.
— Gabe Cohen, CNN, 13 Jan. 2023 -
Investigators believe the death may have come due to drugs the inmate took prior to entering the jail.
— William Thornton | Wthornton@al.com, al, 7 Feb. 2022 -
The rent has come due for America's small businesses and at a very inopportune time.
— CBS News, 4 July 2022 -
The rent has come due for America’s small businesses and at a very inopportune time.
— Mae Anderson, USA TODAY, 6 July 2022 -
Bottom-line: The bill is starting to come due for this massive rebuild that’s delivered nothing.
— Dave Hyde, Sun Sentinel, 16 Jan. 2024 -
These entities have binged on debt issuance to record highs and now must refinance from all-time low interest rates as those debt piles come due.
— Ivan Illan, Forbes, 11 Dec. 2023 -
The bill is also going to come due soon on the roster after the Rams spent years burning draft picks and throwing big money at veteran players.
— Ben Volin, BostonGlobe.com, 14 Jan. 2023 -
Foreign reserves were drained down to $1.9 billion by the end of March—enough to pay for just a month of imports, but far from sufficient to pay the $4 billion in debt repayments that will come due this year.
— Samanth Subramanian, Quartz, 12 Apr. 2022 -
But this can have major tax implications in retirement, when the bill will finally come due.
— Prarthana Prakash, Fortune, 1 July 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'come due.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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