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    Verwenden Sie „exchequer“ in einem Satz

    exchequer Beispielsätze

    exchequer


    1. 8, the bank delivered up two millions of exchequer Bills to be cancelled


    2. 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


    3. 18; also History of the Exchequer, chap


    4. } To let a farm in this manner, was quite agreeable to the usual economy of, I believe, the sovereigns of all the different countries of Europe, who used frequently to let whole manors to all the tenants of those manors, they becoming jointly and severally answerable for the whole rent ; but in return being allowed to collect it in their own way, and to pay it into the king's exchequer by the hands of their own bailiff, and being thus altogether freed from the insolence of the king's officers; a circumstance in those days regarded as of the greatest importance


    5. An extraordinary quantity of paper money of some sort or other, too, such as exchequer notes, navy bills, and bank bills, in England, is generally issued upon such occasions, and, by supplying the place of circulating gold and silver, gives an opportunity of sending a greater quantity of it abroad


    6. if any person lay any wool, not entered as aforesaid, within fifteen miles of the sea, it must be seized and forfeited ; and if, after such seizure, any person shall claim the same, he must give security to the exchequer, that if he is cast upon trial he shall pay treble costs, besides all other penalties


    7. The court of exchequer, instituted for the levying of the king's revenue, and for enforcing the payment of such debts only as were due to the king, took cognizance of all other contract debts ; the plantiff alleging that he could not pay the king, because the defendant would not pay him


    8. For the proper application of this sum, the committee is obliged to account annually to the cursitor baron of exchequer; which account is afterwards to be laid before parliament


    9. But parliament, which gives so little attention to the application of millions, is not likely to give much to that of £13,000 a-year; and the cursitor baron of exchequer, from his profession and education, is not likely to be profoundly skilled in the proper expense of forts and garrisons


    10. upon their capital; and that whatever remained of their revenues and neat profits at home should be divided into four parts; three of them to be paid into the exchequer for the use of the public, and the fourth to be reserved as a fund, either for the further reduction of their bond-debts, or for the discharge of other contingent exigencies which the company might labour under

    11. Navy and exchequer bills, which are issued sometimes in payment of a part of such debts, and sometimes for other purposes, constitute a debt of the second kind; exchequer bills bearing interest from the day on which they are issued, and navy bills six months after they are issued


    12. The bank of England, either by voluntarily discounting those bills at their current value, or by agreeing with government for certain considerations to circulate exchequer bills, that is, to receive them at par, paying the interest which happens to be due upon them, keeps up their value, and facilitates their circulation, and thereby frequently enables government to contract a very large debt of this kind


    13. During the great recoinage in king William's time, when the bank of England thought proper to put a stop to its usual transactions, exchequer bills and tallies are said to have sold from twenty-five to sixty per cent


    14. In 1695, the persons who had purchased those annuities were allowed to exchange them for others of ninety-six years, upon paying into the exchequer sixty-three pounds in the hundred ; that is, the difference between fourteen per cent


    15. Chancellor of the Exchequer in Great Britain during the Thatcher years, Nigel Lawson, in his book An Appeal to Reason A Cool Look at Global Warming takes the open approach of accepting the worst of the warming predictions, and then asks some questions


    16. Exchequer was to sell off more than half of Britain’s gold reserve, when the price


    17. The MoD, at the request of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, in response has frozen the contract until the formal investigation has been completed


    18. The cost to the exchequer? None


    19. “Either in the exchequer, or in the accounts of the President and his cronies


    20. It was some eighteen months after he had left that the auditors began to wonder how the bank had managed to give so much more to the Exchequer than they should have done, but had been unable to discover how the error had occurred

    21. As for the UK itself, we save our exchequer a small fortune which the conflict, peacekeeping efforts, direct rule and everything else is presently costing us, and yet none of these costs would pass on to the US


    22. Without terrorism, the costs to the British exchequer, and therefore to us, will disappear


    23. We shall, of course, also lose tax revenue, but I estimate the net benefit to the Exchequer to be in the order of some £100 million each year


    24. � In 1843, when the income tax was first imposed, each penny in the pound brought into the National Exchequer 772, 000


    25. The Exchequer had been the only holdout, strictly from a budgetary standpoint


    26. They form a small percentage and put in all their sincerity for the masses that are useless and undisciplined lots living off the exchequer


    27. When afflictions, disturbances and troubles occurred, his caliphate was only for two years and six months, and he returned again to the divine laws and rules and applied them on the nation without costing the budget of the state any expenses but he only took the item of alms and by it he solved all problems during two years and six months only and it is a half-five-year plan, he could solve all the society's problems during this short period without costing the exchequer any money


    28. - After all this, there was still money, he announced all over his country from Morocco to India for those who want to marry to write down their names and choose their brides and then the exchequer pays their dowries and the expenses of their marriage from the money of alms, by this he put an end to singleness among young men and women


    29. was appointed was Chancellor of the Exchequer, a financial position not to his


    30. In 1924 he switched sides again and became a thorn inside the government ruining its plans by making bad decisions and losing the govts money as Chancellor of the exchequer: Once again the evil of his undead filth made sure all positive efforts to improve Britain’s people and govt were checked

    31. mega-scam, which resulted in a loss of Rs 139,652 crore to the exchequer


    32. Kapil Sibal would like us to believe that the exchequer benefited by Rs 110 crores be-


    33. keting figure is used to calculate the loss then the exchequer is poorer by Rs 50,000


    34. that the Finance Minister, the guardian of the public exchequer – and entrusted with the prin-


    35. swift action against all those responsible for the whopping loss to the exchequer pleaded with


    36. The funds of the committee consisted of £500, obtained from the Imperial Exchequer, and about £250 in charitable donations


    37. They awaited the arrival of Henrai Maidyn and Daryus Parkair, the Republic’s Chancellor of the Exchequer and Seneschal, who were en route to the embassy to discuss the latest dispatches from General Stohnar and Duke Eastshare


    38. It was produced by Dave Edmunds and performed by music hall comedian and Samuel Beckett actor Max Wall, and called “England’s Glory,” a catalog of beloved and reviled institutions from a chocolate confectionery to the Chancellor of the Exchequer


    39. Who was that Corsican of six and twenty? What signified that splendid ignoramus, who, with everything against him, nothing in his favor, without provisions, without ammunition, without cannon, without shoes, almost without an army, with a mere handful of men against masses, hurled himself on Europe combined, and absurdly won victories in the impossible? Whence had issued that fulminating convict, who almost without taking breath, and with the same set of combatants in hand, pulverized, one after the other, the five armies of the emperor of Germany, upsetting Beaulieu on Alvinzi, Wurmser on Beaulieu, Melas on Wurmser, Mack on Melas? Who was this novice in war with the effrontery of a luminary? The academical military school excommunicated him, and as it lost its footing; hence, the implacable rancor of the old Caesarism against the new; of the regular sword against the flaming sword; and of the exchequer against genius


    40. She then permitted us (no doubt from extreme moderation) to trade with the French colonies, taking care, at the same time, to force a direction of that trade in a channel which could not fail to yield a tributary supply to her exchequer

    41. The weight of the House of Commons is felt too sensibly there for their inclinations not to be sounded by motions from their Chancellor of the Exchequer, and their members of opposition, in relation to the great course of foreign affairs


    42. And I will now ask the gentleman from Massachusetts whether, if the Chancellor of the Exchequer, or any other higher authority in Great Britain, should write a letter to Sir William Scott, and a circular letter to the Collector of Liverpool, informing them that the Orders in Council did not apply to American vessels from and after the 1st November, he would not deem those letters to be evidence of the fact? If so, why not give the same credence to the letters of the Duke of Massa and the Duc de Gaete? I wish to preserve the faith of the nation


    43. Those English merchants state that it was made up and received from our trade with continental Europe; this has not been disproved by the British Chancellor of the Exchequer, nor by his friend Stevens, of War in Disguise—it is a fact; they cannot deny it


    44. This palpable progress towards the complete extinction of the relics of one of the finest Gothic buildings in Scotland, certainly rendered it not only justifiable but highly praiseworthy that the Exchequer should make some effort for preserving so much of the pile as was preservable


    45. During the operations for cleaning out the ruins, which were conducted under the authority of the Exchequer in 1815,[3] some pieces of monumental sculpture were discovered, two of which are curious and remarkable


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    Synonyme für "exchequer"

    exchequer treasury