How to Use guarantor in a Sentence
guarantor
noun-
What can serve as the guarantor of such a treaty if not U.S. forces?
— William A. Galston, WSJ, 8 May 2018 -
The city also agreed to be the guarantor for those loans.
— Caroline Spivack, Curbed, 3 Nov. 2021 -
If the lot sells for over that price, the guarantor stands to profit.
— Carol Besler, Robb Report, 8 Nov. 2023 -
The Treasury owns about three-quarters of those loans, and is the guarantor for most of the rest.
— Saleha Mohsin, Bloomberg.com, 10 May 2020 -
The deal also implies that the Kurds have a new guarantor.
— Nathan Hodge, CNN, 23 Oct. 2019 -
At stake are the twin pillars of the judiciary’s role as guarantor of the rule of law.
— Ned Temko, The Christian Science Monitor, 30 June 2022 -
Harder said that Trump was the only guarantor of the loans in question.
— CBS News, 29 Aug. 2019 -
Russia, Turkey and Iran will act as guarantors of the cease-fire.
— Andrew Roth, Washington Post, 5 May 2017 -
His father was a guarantor on the lease because the boys did not have any income.
— Ej Dickson, Rolling Stone, 23 June 2021 -
The paper said Blyth raised the idea of acting as guarantor and asked Sharp for advice on how to proceed.
— Georg Szalai, The Hollywood Reporter, 22 Jan. 2023 -
The insurer is paid a premium to share in the guarantor’s losses in the event of a default. ...
— Telis Demos, WSJ, 25 Aug. 2020 -
To secular Israelis, the court is a guarantor of their rights.
— Patrick Kingsley, New York Times, 28 Sep. 2023 -
Many people who once saw the state as a guarantor of stability and growth now see it as a threat.
— The Economist, 5 Sep. 2019 -
The greater the distortion, the greater the danger to the borrower and to either the lender or, if Fannie or Freddie buy the loan, its guarantor.
— The Editors, National Review, 21 Apr. 2023 -
A blaster, or a Death Star, is the only real guarantor of life and liberty.
— Manu Saadia, The New Yorker, 13 Jan. 2017 -
The state is nothing if not the guarantor of the very property relations that got us into this mess in the first place.
— Michael Robbins, Harper’s Magazine , 9 Nov. 2022 -
And it’s not just a one-time loan—the group will also stand as a guarantor with the diamond suppliers.
— Jill N Newman, Town & Country, 25 Feb. 2021 -
And though no guarantor of success, passion is job one.
— Arkansas Online, 17 Nov. 2022 -
Judah himself is both the one who makes the commitment and also the guarantor.
— Rabbi Avi Weiss, Sun Sentinel, 19 Dec. 2022 -
The guarantor for citizens to get from A to B in an acceptable amount of time was mainly one thing: speed.
— Jennifer Jacobs Dungs, Forbes, 3 Mar. 2021 -
Not this truce where the guarantor’s warplanes bomb civilians.
— Scott Peterson, The Christian Science Monitor, 5 Mar. 2018 -
Ginsburg championed the Bill of Rights as the guarantor of our greatest freedoms, but Scalia wasn’t so sure.
— Tod Worner, National Review, 25 Oct. 2020 -
The land for the town center and the bond itself have been held by and in the name of the Down Development Authority, with the city acting as guarantor of the bond.
— Karen Huppertz, ajc, 23 May 2017 -
In his mind and the Founders’ generally, the role of a free press as a guarantor of liberty and democracy was clear.
— Michael Tomasky, The New Republic, 20 Apr. 2022 -
Greece, Turkey and Britain have been Cyprus’s guarantor powers since 1960.
— WSJ, 10 July 2017 -
The Kremlin initiative is fraught with risks because tensions could rise even among the three guarantors of the cease-fire, Shumilin said.
— Henry Meyer, Bloomberg.com, 2 May 2017 -
Putin has succeeded in being this guarantor, but at the cost of the liberties and human rights of Russians.
— Jordan Michael Smith, The New Republic, 3 Mar. 2022 -
Students would be able to pay off their loans at a faster pace, and the government (as guarantor of many student loans) would benefit as well.
— WSJ, 4 Dec. 2017 -
But no major powers in the region are able to match China in the absence of the United States as a security guarantor.
— Susannah Patton, Foreign Affairs, 13 Sep. 2024 -
Getting a Nobel Peace Prize is by no means a guarantor that the efforts of its recipient have or will be successful.
— Alexander Smith, NBC News, 11 Oct. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'guarantor.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Last Updated: