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Ann225 Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Worn out

Hi,

Can invetments get 'worn out'?

Let's say that two people own a house and one of them is about to buy the other one out. As far as the price goes, the person who's being bought out wants his investments to be taken into account, but the other one thinks that since the first person has been living there for five years, the investments shouldn't play a role because living in the house sort of stripped away their original value.

Thank you.

  

Top answer

Ann225 Let's say that two people own a house and one of them is about to buy the other one out. As far as the price goes, the person who's being bought out wants his investments to be taken into account, but the other one thinks that since the first person has been living there for five years, the investments shouldn't play a role because living in the house sort of stripped away their original value. g.

  • Ann225 Let's say that two people own a house and one of them is about to buy the other one out.
  • As far as the price goes, the person who's being bought out wants his investments to be taken into account, but the other one thinks that since the first person has been living there for five years, the investments shouldn't play a role because living in the house sort of stripped away their original value.
  • g.
  • decorating, fixtures and fittings, fixing the roof, etc.?
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1 Answers
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Ann225Let's say that two people own a house and one of them is about to buy the other one out. As far as the price goes, the person who's being bought out wants his investments to be taken into account, but the other one thinks that since the first person has been living there for five years, the investments shouldn't play a role because living in the house sort of stripp

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