GUT SPREAD

Investments with high rates of profit in short time before market devaluation.

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Categories: G

GUIDELINE LIVES

Asset lives that decide tax depreciation of a building or equipments. It uses categories for apartments and warehouses.

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Categories: G

GUEST

A traveler who lodges at an inn or tavern with the consent of the keeper.Bac. Abr. “Inns,” C, 5; 8 Coke, 32; Mc- Daniels v. Robinson, 20 Vt. 310, 02 Am. Dec.574; Johnson v. Reynolds, 3 Ivau. 201;Shoecraft v. Railey, 25 Iowa, 555; Beale v. I’osey, 72 Ala. 331; Walling v. Potter, 35 Conn. 1S5.A guest, as distinguished from a boarder, is bound for no stipulated time. lie stopsat the inn for as short or as long time as he pleases, paying, while he remains, the customarycharge. Stewart v. McCready, 24 How. Frac. (X. Y.) 02.

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Categories: G

GUIDELINE PREMIUM

The most premium the IRS can charge under life insurance.

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Categories: G

GUEST HOUSE

Accommodations that are larger than a bed and breakfast. The breakfast is in the room charge but does not cover alcohol. It can be a low budger room or luxury apartments. They have ratings of 1-4 stars based on cleanliness, food quality, hospitality, serv

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Categories: G

GUIDING PRINCIPLES

Any ideas that give an organization guidance in circumstances even if goals change and work changes.

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Categories: G

GUEST LAW

A law limiting the passenger rights in an automobile to get a refund from the drivers based on negligence. Negligence has to be proven to get the funds.

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Categories: G

GUIDON DE LA MER

The name of a treatise on maritime law, by an unknownauthor, supposed to have been written about 1071 at Rouen, and considered, incontinental Europe, as a work of high authority.

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Categories: G

GUEST PROPERTY COVERAGE

Coverage for hotel or motel property. It can cover a safe deposit box and legal liability for damages while in the insured’s possession.

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Categories: G

GUILD

A voluntary association of persons pursuing the same trade, art, profession,or business, such as printers, goldsmiths, wool merchants, etc., united under a distinctorganization of their own. analogous to that of a corporation, regulating the affairs oftheir trade or business by their own laws and rules, and aiming, by co-operation andorganization, to protect and promote the interests of their common vocation. In medievalhistory these fraternities or guilds played an important part in the government ofsome states; as at Florence, in the thirteenth and following centuries, where tlicy chosetile council of government of the city. But with the growth of cities and the advance inthe organization of municipal government, their importance and prestige has declined.The place of meeting of a guild, or association of guilds, was called the “Guildhall.” Theword is said to bo derived from the Anglo-Saxon “gild” or “geld.” a tax or tribute,because each member of the society was required to pay a tax towards its support.

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Categories: G