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exchequer - use in sentences
Converse of object
- cost: Myth one - Compulsion would be more expensive than voluntarism and would cost the exchequer lost revenue or cost jobs.
- fund: Land values would fund the exchequer and today's taxes would be lifted or substantially abated.
Adjective modifier
- national: Any such shifts in funding have to be match funded from the national exchequer.
- public: It is, then, common sense to collect public Land Rent to fund the needs of the public exchequer.
- central: The government has well over a trillion pounds of transactions flowing through its central exchequer accounts each year.
- royal: The disagreement gained momentum and eventually the bishop of Carlisle and the royal exchequer were called upon to resolve the matter.
- empty: Regular parliaments were being held, taxation was coming in and the booty taken from England filled the empty exchequer.
Modifies a noun
- funding: These are independent bodies many of which are only partly, or in some cases not at all, dependent on exchequer funding.
- fund: Any assets which are purchased using exchequer funds either wholly or in part, must follow the guidelines laid down by the HEFCE.
- cost: We then compare the increase in value added to the likely exchequer costs of the program under a number of scenarios.
- service: EXCHEQUER SERVICES 4 Exchequer services cover the following functions.
- roll: This is the earliest ever record of whiskey production in Scotland, and is to be found in the exchequer roll of 1494.
- revenue: Good company brains would not be wasted on tax wheezes, and LVT would be a sure source of exchequer revenue.
Preposition: in
- form: The feu simply becomes an obligation to pay the annual rental value to the public exchequer in the form of LVT.
The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.
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