0 an agreement in which you pay a company money and they pay your costs if you have an accident, injury, etc.: --
1 the agreement in which you pay a company money and the company pays the cost if you have an accident, injury, or loss: --
2 an agreement in which you pay a company money, either in one payment or in regular payments, and they pay your costs, for example, if you lose or damage something, or have an accident, injury, etc.: --
Most insurances won't cover you if you take part in any dangerous sporting activities.
insurance pays for sth/covers sb/sth This insurance covers the cost of their mortgage but they are considering more life cover.
claim on the/your insurance I claimed on the insurance for the damage to the furniture.
be covered by (the) insurance Unfortunately, stolen personal belongings are not covered by the insurance.
have insurance Ensure you have sufficient insurance to cover the cost of replacing your valuables.
arrange/obtain/take out insurance You must make sure you take out insurance on the contents of your house.
offer/provide/refuse insurance Have you ever been refused car insurance in the past?
insurance against sth You can take out insurance against employee injury.
insurance contributions/payments/premiums
This situation changed only in 1967, when separated trust funds were created for health and old age insurance.
As an economic history of fire insurance it is indeed likely to be the definitive overall account for many years to come.
However, the price of insurance for consumers has not decreased.
The private sector scheme is managed by private pension institutions : insurance companies, corporate pension funds, industry-wide pension funds, and other statutory pension providers.
Moreover, and more damagingly, he has established no grounds for preferring the hypothetical insurance scheme to the talent auction.
The 70-year old pensioner has to accept substantial probabilities of capital exhaustion within his lifetime relying on an insurance equivalent fund solution.
In the first subsection, we discuss the historical context for adoption of workers' compensation insurance in the early twentieth century.
Insurance for non-occupational disabilities, by contrast, had no established network of interests; such insurance was virtually non-existent in the private sector.