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    Sinonimi e Definizioni Vai ai sinonimi

    Usa "tax" in una frase

    tax frasi di esempio

    tax


    taxed


    taxes


    taxing


    1. Tax benefits are also available in case of dependents


    2. These returns should be correctly assessed keeping in mind the taxation, tax concessions and tax rebates


    3. We must follow all correct procedures, have PAN number allotted and include all taxable income in the Income Tax return


    4. Son was charged a tax at the gate and


    5. After you add Temple tax and Herod’s tax and Caesar’s tax and the tax collector’s share, you were left with somewhere between 10 and 20 percent of your money… This brings about an interesting struggle


    6. Have food stamps saved anyone? Has anyone been better off in life because they have health insurance? Does life get easier when we have these conveniences? Our tax money goes to pay for things like health insurance, food stamps, social security, Medicare, upkeep of unused buildings (that could be used to shelter the homeless if our Government really did care about us), great scientific studies like whether sick shrimp perform as well on a treadmill as healthy shrimp (this is a real study funded by the Government – it cost about 15 million dollars), army expenses, paying off the interest on our nation’s debt, veteran’s benefits, and government jobs such as postal workers or police officers


    7. You have examples in the Bible of such: Jesus ate with tax collectors and sinners


    8. Obviously, not all of the tax collectors were hell-bent on wickedness


    9. It’s a lot more fun than council tax management, I can tell you


    10. It will tax your sense of balance to the utmost but practice will be the answer

    11. On the windscreen there is a branded tax disk holder


    12. He tries to remember; speeding tickets, unpaid fines, tax fraud, anything that might shut out the possibility of a name other than his daughter’s being mentioned


    13. Pistoleiros kept the government and Judge’s troops from closing it but exacted a heavy tax


    14. It would cost a bit to keep Chrissie somewhere decent – but they could probably offset the cost of her hospital fees against tax or something and at least it would keep that inconvenient mother of hers out of the picture


    15. Rule 106: It is illegal to attempt to convert wild wolves to Taoism for the purposes of tax evasion


    16. It also outlined that there was an extra tax if the Horse was being fed on any non-local oats, for ‘security reasons’ of course


    17. The initial tax rate not to exceed


    18. (Specific tax codes, exemptions, and collections to be issued in accordance with California policy and Tahoe City Charter, and set forth in a separate statute, forthcoming


    19. I suppose you know that he was a tax collector for


    20. (something about an unfair tax on animals he did not

    21. There was no way to enforce a law, there was no way to enforce a tax collection


    22. he’d run away to Paris to avoid arrest for stealing the tax


    23. 20“His successor will send out a tax collector to maintain the royal


    24. ‘He was stealing money from his tax collections,


    25. ‘What does the amount of land have to do with tax?


    26. It’s sad in this country but the way the income tax laws are set up if both people work and earn about the same amount of money, they are much better off financially filing separate returns that a joint married return


    27. From there she branched in to the areas she knew the most about, Sales, bookkeeping, employee record keeping, tax records, and balancing the two sides with the middle


    28. ‘I’m hiding from the tax collector,’ he said at last,


    29. Ted actually burned a bunch of his paintings so would not have to pay taxes on the paintings a sad loss to us all and again something you can thank the US government for with their stupid tax laws


    30. A regulation which enables those of the same trade to tax themselves, in order to provide for

    31. Tobacco might be cultivated with advantage through the greater part of Europe ; but, in almost every part of Europe, it has become a principal subject of taxation ; and to collect a tax from every different farm in the country where this plant might happen to be cultivated, would be more difficult, it has been supposed, than to levy one upon its importation at the custom-house


    32. "You have no personal papers or cards or license or tax certificates or anything to show me who you are?" the youth sneered, "I will fetch the manager, in the meantime I suggest you get that offensive goat out of here pronto


    33. Till 1736, indeed, the tax of the king of Spain amounted to one fifth of the standard silver, which till then might be considered as the real rent of the greater part of the silver mines of Peru, the richest which have been known in the world


    34. If there had been no tax, this fifth would naturally have belonged to the landlord, and many mines might have been wrought which could not then be wrought, because they could not afford this tax


    35. The tax of the duke of Cornwall upon tin is supposed to amount to more than five per cent


    36. But the silver mines of Peru are not now able to pay even this low rent; and the tax upon silver was, in 1736, reduced from one fifth to one tenth


    37. Even this tax upon silver, too, gives more temptation to smuggling than the tax of one twentieth upon tin; and smuggling must be much easier in the precious than in the bulky commodity


    38. The tax of the king of Spain, accordingly, is said to be very ill paid, and that of the duke of Cornwall very well


    39. The same encouragement is given in Peru to the discovery and working of new gold mines; and in gold the king's tax amounts only to a twentieth part of the standard rental


    40. If the king's tax, therefore, is but ill paid upon silver, it is likely to be much worse paid upon gold; and rent must make a much smaller part of the price of gold than that of silver

    41. Letters were circulated, funds collected and naturally dispersed on posters (non-talking), postage and trust tax


    42. arrival of the tax collectors


    43. In the greater part of the silver mines of Peru, the tax of the king of Spain, amounting to a tenth of the gross produce, eats up, it has already been observed, the whole rent of the land


    44. This tax was originally a half; it soon afterwards fell to a third, then to a fifth, and at last to a tenth, at which late it still continues


    45. If I did pay tax I would be horrified that they was spending my hard earned cash on making gray pig-men


    46. He informs us, too, that if we were to judge of the quantity of gold annually imported from the Brazils to Lisbon, by the amount of the tax paid to the king of Portugal, which it seems, is one-fifth of the standard metal, we might value it at eighteen millions of cruzadoes, or forty-five millions of French livres, equal to about twenty millions sterling


    47. The tax of the king of Spain upon gold is only one-twentieth part of the standard metal, or five per cent


    48. ; whereas his tax upon silver amounts to one-tenth part of it, or to ten per cent


    49. The tax, indeed, of the king of Portugal upon the gold of the Brazils, is the same with the ancient tax of the king of Spain upon the silver of Mexico and Peru; or one-fifth part of the standard metal


    50. Though it is not very probable that any part of a tax, which is not only imposed upon one of the most proper subjects of taxation, a mere luxury and superfluity, but which affords so very important a revenue as the tax upon silver, will ever be given up as long as it is possible to pay it; yet the same impossibility of paying it, which, in 1736














































    1. You are getting taxed more and more and more so that Augustus can rule more of the world


    2. The instrumental ending taxed her playing to the utmost, especially when she was this baked


    3. Her good humor was genuine, but audibly taxed


    4. This second limitation of the freedom of trade, according to some people, should, upon most occasions, be extended much farther than to the precise foreign commodities which could come into competition with those which had been taxed at home


    5. When the necessaries of life have been taxed in any country, it becomes proper, they pretend, to tax not only the like necessaries of life imported from other countries, but all sorts of foreign goods which can come into competition with any thing that is the produce of domestic industry


    6. Every commodity, therefore, which is the produce of domestic industry, though not immediately taxed itself, becomes dearer in consequence of such taxes, because the labour which produces it becomes so


    7. The colonies may be taxed either by their own assemblies, or by the parliament of Great Britain


    8. It has been proposed, accordingly, that the colonies should be taxed by requisition, the parliament of Great Britain determining the sum which each colony ought to pay, and the provincial assembly assessing and levying it in the way that suited best the circumstances of the province


    9. The islands of Guernsey and Jersey, without any means of resisting the authority of parliament, are more lightly taxed than any part of Great Britain


    10. Examples are not wanting of empires in which all the different provinces are not taxed, if I may be allowed the expression, in one mass ; but in which the sovereign regulates the sum which each province ought to pay, and in some provinces assesses and levies it as he thinks proper ; while in others he leaves it to be assessed and levied as the respective states of each province shall determine

    11. They have rejected, therefore, the proposal of being taxed by parliamentary requisition, and, like other ambitious and high-spirited men, have rather chosen to draw the sword in defence of their own importance


    12. The parliament of Great Britain insists upon taxing the colonies ; and they refuse to be taxed by a parliament in which they are not represented


    13. perpetual monopoly, all the other subjects of the state are taxed very absurdly in two different ways : first, by the high price of goods, which, in the case of a free trade, they could buy much cheaper ; and, secondly, by their total exclusion from a branch of business which it might be both convenient and profitable for many of them to carry on


    14. It is for the most worthless of all purposes, too, that they are taxed in this manner


    15. In the Venetian territory, all the arable lands which are given in lease to farmers are taxed at a tenth of the rent


    16. In order to discourage the practice, which is generally a foolish one, this species of rent might be valued rather high, and consequently taxed somewhat higher than common money-rents


    17. According to that valuation, the lands belonging to the bishop of Breslaw are taxed at twenty-five per cent


    18. In the dominions of the king of Prussia, the revenue of the church is taxed much higher than that of lay proprietors


    19. In others, they are taxed more lightly than other lands


    20. In Silesia, lands held by a noble tenure are taxed three per cent

    21. The honours and privileges of different kinds annexed to the former, his Prussian majesty had probably imagined, would sufficiently compensate to the proprietor a small aggravation of the tax; while, at the same time, the humiliating inferiority of the latter would be in some measure alleviated, by being taxed somewhat more lightly


    22. Two districts, for example, one of which ought, in the actual state of things, to be taxed at nine hundred, the other at eleven hundred livres, are, by the old assessment, both taxed at a thousand livres


    23. A tax upon them would fall altogether upon the proprietor, who would thus be taxed for a subject which afforded him neither conveniency nor revenue


    24. Nothing can be more reasonable, than that a fund, which owes its existence to the good government of the state, should be taxed peculiarly, or should contribute something more than the greater part of other funds, towards the support of that government


    25. In Great Britain the rent of houses is supposed to be taxed in the same proportion as the rent of land, by what is called the annual land tax


    26. } every house is taxed at two and a-half per cent


    27. If he was taxed directly, therefore, in


    28. The interest of money seems, at first sight, a subject equally capable of being taxed directly as the rent of land


    29. At first sight, therefore, the interest of money seems to be a subject as fit to be taxed directly as the rent of land


    30. By what is called the land tax in England, it was intended that the stock should be taxed in the same proportion as land

    31. When the tax upon land was at four shillings in the pound, or at one-fifth of the supposed rent, it was intended that stock should be taxed at one-fifth of the supposed interest


    32. Every hundred pounds stock, accordingly, was supposed to be taxed at twenty-four shillings, the fifth part of six pounds


    33. every hundred pounds stock is supposed to be taxed at twenty shillings only


    34. What remained to be assessed upon the stock or trade of the towns (for the stock upon the land was not meant to be taxed) was very much below the real value of that stock or trade


    35. Upon such occasions the people assemble, and every one is said to declare with the greatest frankness what he is worth, in order to be taxed accordingly


    36. At Zurich, the law orders, that in cases of necessity, every one should be taxed in proportion to his revenue; the amount of which he is obliged to declare upon oath


    37. If any person has been taxed who ought to have been exempted, or if any person has been taxed beyond his proportion, though both must pay in the mean time, yet if they complain, and make good their complaints, the whole parish is reimposed next year, in order to reimburse them


    38. Nobody will lend his money for less interest to those who exercise the taxed, than to those who exercise the untaxed employments


    39. Such transactions, therefore, may be taxed directly


    40. It cannot easily, therefore, be taxed directly

    41. It has been taxed indirectly in two different ways; first, by requiring that the deed, containing the obligation to repay, should be written upon paper or parchment which had paid a certain stamp duty, otherwise not to be valid ; secondly, by requiring, under the like penalty of invalidity, that it should be recorded either in a public or secret register, and by imposing certain duties upon such registration


    42. Stamp duties, and duties of registration, have frequently been imposed likewise upon the deeds transferring property of all kinds from the dead to the living, and upon those transferring immoveable property from the living to the living ; transactions which might easily have been taxed directly


    43. } Collateral successions are taxed according to the degree of relation, from five to thirty per cent


    44. Such transactions may be taxed indirectly, by means either of stamp duties, or of duties upon registration; and those duties either may, or may not, be proportioned to the value of the subject which is transferred


    45. The second class are taxed at seventy ; the third at fifty ; and the fourth, comprehending artificers in villages, and the lowest class of those in towns, at twenty-five florins


    46. The emoluments of offices, therefore, can, in most cases, very well bear to be taxed


    47. Their expense is taxed, by taxing the consumable commodities upon which it is laid out


    48. The rise in the price of the taxed


    49. Though it is taxed in England at three times, and in France at fifteen times its original price, those high duties seem to have no effect upon the wages of labour


    50. Taxes upon luxuries have no tendency to raise the price of any other commodities, except that of the commodities taxed














































    1. Many are set up to save taxes and arrange funds for activities that have no connection to the aims and objectives


    2. taxes from the county and the


    3. This site provides information about all the recent government announcements and important judgements related to direct and indirect taxes and related laws


    4. for taxes and social security


    5. And that's before taxes


    6. "What is it after taxes?"


    7. Taxes in the time of Jesus were somewhere around 80 or 90 percent of the Jew’s wages


    8. with taxes purloined from the owners of neon signs,


    9. The Arched Foot Breathing Exercise taxes your sense of balance but as in all such exercises it can be used as a valuable exercise in concentration


    10. There’s local bottling plants and big payoffs to cheat on the federal taxes

    11. The federal government hasn’t been able to collect any taxes in generations, but the Judges collect the taxes anyway and keep it for themselves


    12. “We, the Council of Tahoe City, make proclamation of the establishment of a School for our children, aged six through thirteen, to be publicly financed through the receipt of taxes assessed upon all sales of goods, merchandise, and services conducted in this town during the months of June, July and August of each year henceforth


    13. ‘No – it’s for taxes


    14. the taxes he had collected


    15. At some point the IRS wanted Ted to pay a bunch of taxes on his paintings saying they were worth this many thousands and thousands of dollars


    16. Ted actually burned a bunch of his paintings so would not have to pay taxes on the paintings a sad loss to us all and again something you can thank the US government for with their stupid tax laws


    17. All taxes, and all the revenue which is founded upon them, all salaries, pensions, and annuities of every kind, are ultimately derived from some one or other of those three original sources of revenue, and are paid either immediately or mediately from the wages of labour, the profits of stock, or the rent of land


    18. Soap, salt, candles, leather, and fermented liquors, have, indeed, become a good deal dearer, chiefly from the taxes which have been laid upon them


    19. This corn was brought from the conquered provinces, of which several, instead of taxes, were obliged to furnish a tenth part of their produce at a stated price, about sixpence a-peck, to the republic


    20. It was once a fifth, and afterwards a tenth, as in silver; but it was found that the work could not bear even the lowest of these two taxes

    21. crippling taxes as much as we do, and he appointed Rene


    22. In these taxes, too, it has already been observed, consists the whole rent of the greater part of the gold and silver mines of Spanish America; and that upon gold is still worse paid than that upon silver


    23. The idea that rich men pay the taxes has its


    24. Coming back to the idea of taxes on profit, even if it is


    25. the grounds with high taxes


    26. tried and have proposed 300 with taxes


    27. It receives and pays the greater part of the annuities which are due to the creditors of the public ; it circulates exchequer bills ; and it advances to government the annual amount of the land and malt taxes, which are frequently not paid up till some years thereafter


    28. All taxes having been usually paid in paper money, the prince would not have wherewithal either to pay his troops, or to furnish his magazines; and the state of the country would be much more irretrievable than if the greater part of its circulation had consisted in gold and silver


    29. The paper of each colony being received in the payment of the provincial taxes, for the full value for which it had been issued, it necessarily derived from this use some additional value, over and above what it would have had, from the real or supposed distance of the term of its final discharge and redemption


    30. This additional value was greater or less, according as the quantity of paper issued was more or less above what could be employed in the payment of the taxes of the particular colony which issued it

    31. A prince, who should enact that a certain proportion of his taxes should be paid in a paper money of a certain kind, might thereby


    32. Thus, not only the great landlord or the rich merchant, but even the common workman, if his wages are considerable, may maintain a menial servant; or he may sometimes go to a play or a puppet-show, and so contribute his share towards maintaining one set of unproductive labourers; or he may pay some taxes, and thus help to maintain another set, more honourable and useful, indeed, but equally unproductive


    33. They generally have some, however ; and in the payment of taxes, the greatness of their number may compensate, in some measure, the smallness of their contribution


    34. Both in terms of men and taxes


    35. He shouldn’t have gone for taxes,


    36. wages and taxes too high


    37. The riches, and so far as power depends upon riches, the power of every country must always be in proportion to the value of its annual produce, the fund from which all taxes must ultimately be paid


    38. The public taxes, to which they were subject, were as irregular and oppressive as the services The ancient lords, though extremely unwilling to grant, themselves, any pecuniary aid to their sovereign, easily allowed him to tallage, as they called it, their tenants, and had not knowledge enough to foresee how much this must, in the end, affect their own revenue


    39. In all the different countries of Europe then, in the same manner as in several of the Tartar governments of Asia at present, taxes used to be levied upon the persons and goods of travellers, when they passed through certain manors, when they went over certain bridges, when they carried about their goods from place to place in a fair, when they erected in it a booth or stall to sell them in


    40. These different taxes were known in England by the names of passage, pontage, lastage, and stallage

    41. Sometimes the king, sometimes a great lord, who had, it seems, upon some occasions, authority to do this, would grant to particular traders, to such particularly as lived in their own demesnes, a general exemption from such taxes


    42. In those days protection was seldom granted without a valuable consideration, and this tax might perhaps be considered as compensation for what their patrons might lose by their exemption from other taxes


    43. In the very imperfect accounts which have been published from Doomsday-book, of several of the towns of England, mention is frequently made, sometimes of the tax which particular burghers paid, each of them, either to the king, or to some other great lord, for this sort of protection, and sometimes of the general amount only of all those taxes


    44. Subsistence, they say, becomes necessarily dearer in consequence of such taxes ; and the price of labour must always rise with the price of the labourer's subsistence


    45. Every commodity, therefore, which is the produce of domestic industry, though not immediately taxed itself, becomes dearer in consequence of such taxes, because the labour which produces it becomes so


    46. Such taxes, therefore, are really equivalent, they say, to a tax upon every particular commodity produced at home


    47. Whether taxes upon the necessaries of life, such as those in Great Britain upon soap, salt, leather, candles, etc


    48. necessarily raise the price of labour, and consequently that of all other commodities, I shall consider hereafter, when I come to treat of taxes


    49. Such taxes, when they have grown up to a certain height, are a curse equal to the barrenness of the earth, and the inclemency of the heavens, and yet it is in the richest and most industrious countries that they have been most generally imposed


    50. As the strongest bodies only can live and enjoy health under an unwholesome regimen, so the nations only, that in every sort of industry have the greatest natural and acquired advantages, can subsist and prosper under such taxes














































    1. some other things that are taxing the mindbody? At


    2. him, either by taxing him to parish rates, or by electing him into a parish office


    3. He imposed in this way a taxing according with


    4. long and taxing trip was on the verge of being decimated


    5. Spain by taxing, and Portugal by prohibiting, the exportation of gold and silver, load that exportation with the expense of smuggling, and raise the value of those metals in other countries so much more above what it is in their own, by the whole amount of this expense


    6. Parliament, in attempting to exercise its supposed right, whether well or ill grounded, of taxing the colonies, has never hitherto demanded of them anything which even approached to a just proportion to what was paid by their fellow subjects at home


    7. colonies, besides, was to rise or fall in proportion to the rise or fall of the land-tax, parliament could not tax them without taxing, at the same time, its own constituents, and the colonies might, in this case, be considered as virtually represented in parliament


    8. According to the scheme of taxing by requisition, the parliament of Great Britain would stand nearly in the same situation towards the colony assemblies, as the king of France does towards the states of those provinces which still enjoy the privilege of having states of their own, the provinces of France which are supposed to be the best governed


    9. In order to put Great Britain upon a footing of equality with her own colonies, which the law has hitherto supposed to be subject and subordinate, it seems necessary, upon the scheme of taxing them by parliamentary requisition, that parliament should have some means of rendering its requisitions immediately effectual, in case the colony assemblies should attempt to evade or reject them; and what those means are, it is not very easy to conceive, and it has not yet been explained


    10. Should the parliament of Great Britain, at the same time, be ever fully established in the right of taxing the colonies, even independent of the consent of their own assemblies, the importance of those assemblies would, from that moment, be at an end, and with it, that of all the leading men of British America

    11. The parliament of Great Britain insists upon taxing the colonies ; and they refuse to be taxed by a parliament in which they are not represented


    12. By valuing, in the same manner, such rents rather high, and consequently taxing them somewhat higher than common money-rents, a practice which is hurtful to the whole community, might, perhaps, be sufficiently discouraged


    13. In the disorderly state of Europe, during the prevalence of the feudal government, the sovereign was obliged to content himself with taxing those who were too weak to refuse to pay taxes


    14. The impossibility of taxing the people, in proportion to their revenue, by any capitation, seems to have given occasion to the invention of taxes upon consumable commodities


    15. The state not knowing how to tax, directly and proportionably, the revenue of its subjects, endeavours to tax it indirectly by taxing their expense, which, it is supposed, will, in most cases, be nearly in proportion to their revenue


    16. Their expense is taxed, by taxing the consumable commodities upon which it is laid out


    17. The object of his scheme was to promote all the different branches of foreign trade, particularly the carrying trade, by taking away all duties upon importation and exportation, and thereby enabling the merchant to employ his whole capital and credit in the purchase of goods and the freight of ships, no part of either being diverted towards the advancing of taxes, The project, however, of taxing, in this manner, goods of immediate or speedy consumption, seems liable to the four following very important objections


    18. equality, it was thought necessary to lay a tax upon this liquor, it might be taxed by taxing the material of which it is made, either at the place of manufacture, or, if the circumstances of the trade rendered such an excise improper, by laying a duty upon its importation into the colony in which it was to be consumed


    19. The decision forbade the state of Maryland from taxing the Bank of the United States, thereby prohibiting any state from taxing a federal entity, for „The power to tax is the power to destroy


    20. taxing the endurance of limited resources…

    21. Hilderich was seemingly more humorous than before, his words clearly not to be taken for granted, but Amonas had to admit the fact that this strange sun and taxing climate would make their efforts even more strained and difficult than he had calculated


    22. use it as a means of taxing transactions and would certainly interfere in its operations


    23. When someone points out that taxing one citizen more than you tax another is not equal protection under the law, the Leftists does not get it


    24. Was the push an all-out effort to get the carbon fines and sanctions going by the time the sun-earth cycle began its cooling phase in order to be in a position to take credit for the drop in temperature? Said another way, without a global taxing body in operation, when the cooling started, this political movement would suffer and possibly die, bringing about some other income redistribution scheme,


    25. centuries, taxing bodies, censors, legal codifiers, and other bureaucrats helped flesh out a government and by 287 BC the legislative plebian assembly had equal importance with


    26. Mrs Worthington creped out of Angel’s room soon after as Angel had fallen asleep again and she was feeling quite drained as it had been a very taxing day emotionally, Mrs Worthington was a mazed at how much she had become attached to Angel in the short time she had been with her


    27. of the complications that can arise from choosing foods that keep taxing our glucose


    28. While I anticipate objections from the legal and accounting professions, that will economically be affected, this should / must not be delayed and should include elimination of the IRS!! Thanks to technology, the taxing transactions could be handled on a daily basis and require virtually ‘no overhead’


    29. The chaos that ensued when Mary took the throne proved to be far more taxing than my petty witchcraft case


    30. The Lord Aten, closing out a most taxing day for those who were merely human, peered back as he slipped below his western rampart, upon a much fuller and happier group than he had risen upon

    31. Raising himself up to a sitting position was fully as taxing as he had expected it would be


    32. The Lord Aten, closing out a most taxing day for those who were merely human, peered back


    33. taxing responsibility, happens to be the only possible salvation of


    34. where each could be alone to meditate and unwind from their taxing schedules


    35. taxing and regulating the Anointed, and pass laws


    36. laws taxing and regulating the Anointed, and pass


    37. I cannot accept or receive any foreign bank wire transfers in this personal bank account without gaining undue attention from the DHS, IRS and state taxing authorities


    38. This shared, I pray to ply thy head with far less taxing thoughts to think


    39. It will be less taxing on the sexual organs, which are vulnerable this year


    40. They derided the ruder, unsophisticated Bossonians, and hard feeling grew between them—the Aquilonians despising the Bossonians and the latter resenting the attitude of their masters – who now boldly called themselves such, and treated the Bossonians like conquered subjects, taxing them exorbitantly, and conscripting them for their wars of territorial expansion—wars the profits of which the Bossonians shared little

    41. Levi was a tax collector who earned a very good living taxing the


    42. " As they descended again, the pressure in their ears became evidently more taxing; given the longer time it now took to equalize


    43. The deadly aerial dance went on for a good ten minutes, taxing Ingrid’s skills as a fighter pilot to the limit and exhausting her


    44. For example, taxing dividends at the same rate as


    45. Shockingly, while many were near starvation due to inequitable distribution, the federal government was paying farmers not to grow crops, so the supply might be reduced and crop and livestock prices increased, and then taxing food and clothing on top of that


    46. As it was, it was now taxing even his ability to keep up


    47. The Devil knew how many bad news this barely started war had already brought to him, taxing his old heart


    48. · The ability to act for the welfare of those taxing your patience


    49. He found cracks and crevasses galore, so the climb wasn't that taxing


    50. Once in Delhi, Sandhya found the winter severe and the rehearsals taxing











































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    Sinonimi per "tax"

    revenue enhancement tax taxation task assess levy assessment charge tariff toll duty obligation impost impose accuse reproach reprove censure burden strain overwork encumber overload tire