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Synonyms

debt

American  
[det] / dɛt /

noun

  1. something that is owed or that one is bound to pay to or perform for another.

    a debt of $50.

    Synonyms:
    due, duty, obligation
  2. a liability or obligation to pay or render something.

    My debt to her for advice is not to be discharged easily.

  3. the condition of being under such an obligation.

    His gambling losses put him deeply in debt.

  4. Theology. an offense requiring reparation; a sin; a trespass.


debt British  
/ dɛt /

noun

  1. something that is owed, such as money, goods, or services

  2. a debt that has little or no prospect of being paid

  3. an obligation to pay or perform something; liability

  4. the state of owing something, esp money, or of being under an obligation (esp in the phrases in debt, in ( someone's ) debt )

  5. a temporary failure to maintain the necessary supply of something

    sleep debt

    oxygen debt

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

debt Cultural  
  1. Money, goods, or services owed by an individual, firm, or government to another individual, firm, or government.


debt Idioms  
  1. see head over heels (in debt).


Other Word Forms

  • debtless adjective
  • superdebt noun

Etymology

Origin of debt

First recorded in 1175–1225; Middle English dette, from Old French, from Latin dēbita (neuter plural, taken in Vulgar Latin as feminine singular), noun use of dēbitus “owed,” past participle of dēbēre “to owe,” contraction of dēhabēre (unrecorded), from dē- de- + habēre “to have”

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

When she got married in 2014, she had debt from medical school.

From The Wall Street Journal

Berkshire ended 2025 with a record $373.1 billion in cash and Treasury bills after accounting for a payable for purchasing some of the short-term government debt, a 4% increase from three months earlier.

From The Wall Street Journal

But the merged company will now need all the cash flow it can muster to service a substantial debt load, so it is unlikely to fully turn away from the biggest payer in town.

From The Wall Street Journal

Mountbatten-Windsor himself got involved, and apparently wrote to another friend later that year that he had a "handle on the debt situation".

From BBC

Questions now pivot to the Ellison family, which will control a constellation of media properties spanning the globe -- though at the cost of accumulating a pile of debt.

From Barron's