English
Etymology
From Middle English borower, borewer, borwere, equivalent to borrow + -er (agent suffix).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈbɔɹəʊə/
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈbɑɹoʊɚ/
Noun
borrower (plural borrowers)
- One who borrows.
a library borrower’s card
1984, Journal of Banking & Finance, volume 8, page 158:But if other negative factors are operating simultaneously, or if the borrower's financial status is weak to start with, then one extra adverse development is more likely to affect returns on the loan.
2002, Manfred Görlach, Still More Englishes, page 144:This term became popular from the late 1960s onwards, languages being neatly divided between borrowers and calquers.
2025 October 1, Annie Ma, “How the government shutdown will affect student loans, FAFSA and the Education Department”, in AP News[1]:For most student loan issues, borrowers work with loan servicers hired by the department rather than directly with FSA staff.
Antonyms
Derived terms
Translations
one who borrows
- Arabic: مُسْتَعِير m (mustaʕīr), مُسْتَعِيرَة f (mustaʕīra)
- Bulgarian: заемополучател m (zaemopolučatel)
- Catalan: manllevador m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 借款人 (zh) (jièkuǎnrén), 借用人 (jièyòngrén)
- Esperanto: prunteprenanto
- Finnish: lainaaja (fi), lainanottaja (fi)
- French: emprunteur (fr) m, emprunteuse (fr) f
- German: Kreditnehmer (de) m, Entleiher m
- Greek: δανειολήπτης (el) m (daneiolíptis)
- Irish: iasachtaí m
- Japanese: 借り手 (かりて, karite)
- Norman: emprunteux m (Jersey)
- Polish: pożyczkobiorca m
- Portuguese: mutuário m, mutuária f, recebedor m, recebedora f
- Russian: заёмщик (ru) m (zajómščik), заёмщица (ru) f (zajómščica), беру́щий взаймы́ m (berúščij vzajmý), беру́щий в долг m (berúščij v dolg)
- Scots: borraer
- Spanish: prestatario m (money)
- Swahili: mkopaji
- Swedish: låntagare (sv) c
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See also
Anagrams