If the person broke your windshield as part of the damage in an accident and they have liability insurance on their car (which is required by law), yes their liability will cover your windshield as well as other damages to your car, person, and passengers.In all other conditions, no as glass damage is covered by your own comprehensive insurance (if you purchased it, its optional).
If you bought it broken then you should exchange it for another but if you broke it and you got the insurance on it then you could get a new one.
"It is broken." Broken is an adjective. Broke is a verb, the past tense of to break.
Accidentally. She accidentally broke the vase. Adverbs tell us more information about verbs. In the above sentence the adverb tells us about the verb broke. How did she break the vase? - accidentally.
The present perfect tense of "broke" is "have broken."
He broke the clock when he accidentally knocked it off the wall.
if the rock fell off of the truck, truck pays. if the rock was slung up from the roadway, you pay.
It depends who broke them. If it was a salon worker - they are covered by the business insurance. If it was another customer - then they are liable for repair or replacement.
it is(un)breakable
It depends on your policy, what is broken and how it broke. A lightning strike which burns out the well pump is probably covered. A collapsed well casing due to age is probably not covered.
If your window was broken due to a covered peril such as Fire, Wind, Hail, Lightning etc then it is certainly covered subject to your deductible. The occasional broken window is a normal and expected part of home ownership. If someone just accidentally broke the window while moving something or by opening and closing the window then it would not be covered unless you have coverage for glass breakage on your policy. You can refer to your home insurance policy to see if you have glass coverage. Bear in mind that most window glass repair is very cheap and usually far less expensive than your deductible would be for a home insurance claim.
Imbroken