Bailed

[Bailed]

Bail can be a verb or a noun. When you bail (verb) someone out of jail, you post money, also known as bail (noun), to assure the authorities that person won't try to run away before going to trial.

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imp. & p. p.
of Bail


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Usage Examples

There's another way we are getting behind business - by sorting out the banks. Taxpayers bailed you out. Now it's time for you to repay the favour and start lending to Britain's small businesses.

Misspelled Form

Bailed, Bailed, ailed, Bailed, Bqailed, Bwailed, Bsailed, Bzailed, Bqiled, Bwiled, Bsiled, Bziled, Baqiled, Bawiled, Basiled, Baziled, Bauiled, Ba8iled, Ba9iled, Baoiled, Bajiled, Bakiled, Bauled, Ba8led, Ba9led, Baoled, Bajled, Bakled, Baiuled, Bai8led, Bai9led, Baioled, Baijled, Baikled, Baikled, Baioled, Baipled, Bai:led, Baiked, Baioed, Baiped, Bai:ed, Bailked, Bailoed, Bailped, Bail:ed, Bailwed, Bail3ed, Bail4ed, Bailred, Bailsed, Bailded, Bailwd, Bail3d, Bail4d, Bailrd, Bailsd, Baildd, Bailewd, Baile3d, Baile4d, Bailerd, Bailesd, Bailedd, Bailesd, Baileed, Bailefd, Bailexd, Bailecd, Bailes, Bailee, Bailef, Bailex, Bailec, Baileds, Bailede, Bailedf, Bailedx, Bailedc.

Other Usage Examples

Humor has bailed me out of more tight situations than I can think of. If you go with your instincts and keep your humor, creativity follows. With luck, success comes, too.

Don't reward bad behavior. It is one of the first rules of parenting. During the financial cataclysm of 2008, we said it differently. When we bailed out banks that had created their own misfortune, we called it a 'moral hazard,' because the bailout absolved the bank's bad acts and created an incentive for it to make the same bad loans again.

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