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    Use "per annum" in a sentence

    per annum example sentences

    per annum


    1. Ironically, that is just what Dixie became after we moved to Oakland and I earned $22,000 per annum equaling the total of our AZ salaries (forget about the COL differential!)


    2. 7 percent per annum in the 90s and 2


    3. The rate of triplets born in the USA is around 1800 sets per annum


    4. percent of South Africans earn less than R50,000 each per annum


    5. about US $16 million per annum in the 1980s and now about


    6. My wages would be $32,000 per annum, from which my monthly room and board of $2,000 would be deducted


    7. (Rupees Ten Thousand only) with interest at the rate of 10 percent per annum, for


    8. due 90 days hence, is discounted today at 20% per annum, the borrower is paid Rs


    9. Attend a minimum of 9 events per annum in person, provided there is a hub within a 40-minute travel distance (one way)


    10. The average prison inmate costs us £60-80,000 per annum

    11. Nicolas was also offering them 30,000 Euros each per annum as bar managers/promoters, and a cut in the profit if Medusa Bar brought in a specific amount of money


    12. Hawaii's Mount Waialeale is the wettest place in the world - it rains throughout the year and about 460 inches per annum


    13. Anyway, he could just get high anytime the thought crossed his mind that he owed $23,000, plus interest of 20% per annum


    14. per annum, fifty thousand dollars per year, to trustees for the maintenance and development of the library and its branches


    15. `The flag - which is the only rent the Duke has to pay for the great estate which brings him in several hundreds of thousands of pounds per annum - is a small tricoloured one with a staff surmounted by an eagle


    16. But would you believe that I purchase all this delight, joy, and happiness, for which I would cheerfully have surrendered ten years of my life, at the small cost of 500 francs per annum, paid quarterly? Henceforth we have nothing to fear


    17. "My father's income is about 50,000 francs per annum; and he will give me, perhaps, ten or


    18. And at the rate of that handsome sum of money per annum, and at no higher rate, you are to live until the donor of the whole appears


    19. "But I was told he had four millions per annum?"


    20. Hence that immense fortune, which, in Lord Wilmore's opinion, possibly amounted to one or two millions per annum,—a precarious fortune, which might be momentarily lost by the failure of the mine

    21. He was called count, he was said to possess 50,000 livres per annum; and his father's immense riches, buried in the quarries of Saravezza, were a constant theme


    22. I'm, he resumed with dramatic force, as good an Irishman as that rude person I told you about at the outset and I want to see everyone, concluded he, all creeds and classes pro rata having a comfortable tidysized income, in no niggard fashion either, something in the neighbourhood of 300 pounds per annum


    23. Andrea, on whose arm hung one of the most consummate dandies of the opera, was explaining to him rather cleverly, since he was obliged to be bold to appear at ease, his future projects, and the new luxuries he meant to introduce to Parisian fashions with his hundred and seventy-five thousand livres per annum


    24. As per prospectus of the Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised Friendly Stateaided Building Society (incorporated 1874), a maximum of 60 pounds per annum, being 1/6 of an assured income, derived from giltedged securities, representing at 5 % simple interest on capital of 1200 pounds (estimate of price at 20 years' purchase), of which to be paid on acquisition and the balance in the form of annual rent, viz


    25. for; when at the end of a year it appears that his household expenses, horses and et caeteras, amount to nearly a thousand, while the proceeds of the practice reckoned from the old books to be worth eight hundred per annum have sunk like a summer pond and make hardly five hundred, chiefly in unpaid entries, the plain inference is that, whether he minds it or not, he is in debt


    26. Apparently I’ve made 12% per annum compounded over the ten years though all the profit has come in the last two years


    27. Annualise that and it’s 24% per annum


    28. None of this troubl’d me much, howe’er, for I knew that the Winter Months were coming upon us (’twas already September) and that not many Ships made more than one Atlantick Crossing per Annum, as we say in Latin—” With this he gave a hasty Look towards Lancelot, who scowl’d now at the slightest Mention of that Tongue, whereupon Horatio smil’d mischievously, then continu’d:


    29. Lord Bellars had not, amazingly, dy’d in Debt, but dy’d in great Wealth, having made so many thousands of Pounds in various Ventures that not only was Lymeworth free of Mortgages, but its Acreage was now so great that it brought in Rents of near seven thousand Pounds per Annum, making the Heir to Lymeworth one of the richest Landlords in all of England!


    30. Brokers buying the shares at 11 (without paying commission), say on January 15, 1935, could have borrowed $10 per share thereon at not more than 2% per annum

    31. This operation would have netted a sure return at the rate of 40% per annum on the capital invested—as shown by the following calculation:


    32. It is clear, at any rate, that the investor who favors the Cudahy first-lien 5s is paying a premium of about 15% per annum (the difference in yield) for only a partial insurance against loss


    33. Let us assume a bond buyer has his choice of investing $1,000 for $20 per annum without risk, or for $70 per annum with 1 chance out of 20 each year that his principal would be lost


    34. Railroads must either own 500 miles of standard-gauge line or else have operating revenues of not less than $10,000,000 per annum


    35. The properties of this company were leased to American Tobacco Company under a 99-year contract, expiring also in 2022, providing for annual payments of $2,500,000 (with the privilege to the lessee to settle by a lump-sum payment equivalent to the then present value of the rental, discounted at 7% per annum)


    36. , corporations and wealthy individuals; (3) those with moderate income derived wholly from investments, since the maximum annual return ultimately obtainable from United States Savings Bonds is limited to $2,500 per annum


    37. The chief disadvantage is the cost of the service, which averages about ½% per annum on the principal involved


    38. 50 per annum (7% on $50 par) and in addition participates equally per share with the common in any dividends paid on the latter in excess of $3


    39. This may very well be true, and at the same time the rate of increase in value may be substantially less than $3 per annum compounded


    40. The reports to stockholders were supremely ambiguous on the matter of depreciation charges,7 but according to the financial manuals the company’s policy was as follows: “Depreciation is $300,000 per annum, and all items of replacement and building alterations are charged direct to operating expense

    41. The heedlessness of speculators is well shown by the price of $54 established for Colorado Fuel and Iron Preferred in June 1933, when its short-term bond issue (Colorado Industrial Company 5s, due 1934, guaranteed by the parent company) was selling at 45, an indicated yield of well over 100% per annum


    42. 9% per annum on asset value, or say 3


    43. On this basis the purchases would realize his assigned objective (in 1963, a future overall return of 7½% per annum) even if the growth rate actually realized proved substantially less than that projected in the formula


    44. 5% respectively per annum), but quite small for the high-risk portfolios(0


    45. Assuming the deal had gone through in six months, his final profit might have been at about a 40% per annum rate


    46. In this way they did quite well through many years of ups and downs in the general market; they averaged about 20% per annum on the several millions of capital they had accepted for management, and their clients were well pleased with the results


    47. A basic reason for owning these common stocks is that we believe the prospects appear to be good that NAVs will grow over the next five to seven years at rates of not less than 10 percent per annum compounded


    48. This problem notwithstanding, the investor using a fundamental finance approach can obtain large margins of safety by restricting his purchases to issues selling at steep discounts from readily ascertainable NAVs from highly creditworthy issuers with good prospects for increasing NAV in the future at rates of 10 percent per annum or larger


    49. 7 percent per annum compounded before adding back dividends paid


    50. Further, we restrict such investments to companies that we believe, after thorough analysis, have good prospects to be able to grow those NAVs by not less than 10 percent per annum compounded over the next three to five years
























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