View example sentences and word forms for Bankrupting.
Bankrupting meaning
present participle and gerund of bankrupt
Example sentences (15)
Scammers can use this information to impersonate you to banks, realtors and others, enriching themselves while bankrupting you or destroying your credit.
That is exactly what is happening to the United States on two fronts and it is bankrupting our country, depleting the military that should serve our own national interest, and threatening to drag the US into World War III.
Their prosecutions would have succeeded in sending Trump to jail (or bankrupting him) but for the inconvenient fact that voters rejected their efforts to ruin the former president and elected him to the White House for a second time anyway.
They actually come together because net zero is bankrupting us.
Who better to ride out the bankrupting of our great Republic than with your favorite PJ Media writers?
At the same time, it is a vital Iranian interest to get out from under Trump’s oil sanctions, which are bankrupting its economy.
He detailed how he took time off to spend with his sick mother and that her medical bills ended up bankrupting him.
This constant financial mismanagement is bankrupting the country and robbing future generations of Americans to pay for it.
Catastrophic and potentially bankrupting at the time.
Cruz, casting himself as a blue-collar champion, has blamed the setup for bankrupting a major refinery in Philadelphia.
How about if your claim to fame is bankrupting several businesses (including a casino) as well as being the host of a failed 'reality TV' series?
TRD reports that people close to Cohen have stated that federal investigators are bankrupting him.
Although Emperor Wen was famous for bankrupting the state treasury with warfare and construction projects, he made many improvements to infrastructure during his early reign.
Both were granted armed ships and full monopolies over trade around their settlements, to prevent better-armed, lower-priced, and better-quality Dutch goods from bankrupting the enterprise.
The cost was reputed to have amounted to many thousand pounds, almost bankrupting Leicester, though it probably did not exceed £1,700It is difficult to accurately compare 16th century and modern prices or incomes.