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Virginia274 Posted 11 years ago
Vocabulary

Meaning of marl?

Hi,
What's the meaning of marl in the following sentence? What other words I can use instead of it? Do the sentences below have any problems?

These situations are known as protective covenants and it remains in a strong marls till the debt is repaid and these circumstances may include to limitations on future lending in the firm and co-operate to payment of dividends, sale of assets, managerial payment, limitations on new finance.

Thanks.
  

Top answer

Generally the sentence is a mess, and strewn with errors. It is not properly comprehensible. "marls" makes no sense.

  • Generally the sentence is a mess, and strewn with errors.
  • It is not properly comprehensible.
  • "marls" makes no sense.
  • It seems to be either a typo or a translation look-up that has gone wrong.
  • I can't think what it was supposed to say.
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7 Answers
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Generally the sentence is a mess, and strewn with errors. It is not properly comprehensible. "marls" makes no sense. It seems to be either a typo or a translation look-up that has gone wrong. I can't think what it was supposed to say. It doesn't help that it is unclear what "it" refers to.
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The sentence is riddled with serious errors, and I suppose that the phrase you are referring to is a typographical error of some sort. What phrase was meant I do not know.
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Ahhh, I see. Anyways That's fine. Thanks.
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virginia274Ahhh, I see. Anyways That's fine. Thanks.
Don't give up so easily, Virginia. We can all work together to get your question answered. Maybe it was a typo in the original?
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Well, I am so happy that you are motivating me for it, Philip Emotion: smile I have no idea about it, maybe it is a typo as u said. But I rewrote
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virginia274 have no idea about it, maybe it is a typo as u said.
Do you know the native language of the author of this text? (I am assuming it is not English.) I'm wondering whether a word in that language has two (or more) meanings, one being the correct meaning for the sentence, and the other being a word for some kind of mineral that could translate as "mar
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GPYDo you know the native language of the author of this text?
Unfortunately no.

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