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Definition of Tax bill
1. Noun. Money owed for taxes.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tax Bill
Literary usage of Tax bill
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Parliamentary Debates by Great Britain Parliament, Thomas Curson Hansard (1828)
"Mr. Pitt, when he brought forward his perpetual Land-tax bill, admitted the
inequalities of the rate ; but said that the exigencies of the state did not ..."
2. The Gentleman's Magazine (1795)
"The Land-tax Bill being ma Com- ... brought up the report of the Committee upon
the Land-tax Bill. Mr. Alderman Curtis laid, ..."
3. The Congressional Globe ...: 23d Congress to the 42d Congress, Dec. 2, 1833 ...by United States Congress, Francis Preston Blair, John Cook Rives, Franklin Rives, George A. Bailey by United States Congress, Francis Preston Blair, John Cook Rives, Franklin Rives, George A. Bailey (1872)
"... 2076 on the resolution on the right to originate revenue bills 2110 on the
resolution providing for a final on the tariff and tax bill 3453, ..."
4. The Annual Register, Or, A View of the History, Politics, and Literature for by Edmund Burke, Benjamin Franklin Collection (Library of Congress), John Davis Batchelder Collection (Library of Congress) (1834)
"... being a tax bill, ought to haue originated in a Committee of the whole
House—Committee appointed to report on this question, and reports against the ..."
5. Supreme Court Reporter by Robert Desty, United States Supreme Court, West Publishing Company (1918)
"For value received assign this special tax bill and the lien thereof to Munie-
38 SUP.CT.—15 ipal Securities Corporation, and authorize to sign name — to ..."
6. Hansard's Parliamentary Debates by Great Britain Parliament, Thomas Curson Hansard (1845)
"Report on the Property tax bill was brought up. On the Question that the Amendments
be read a second time, Mr. C. Buller rose for the purpose of moving the ..."
7. The Works of Charles Sumner by Charles Sumner (1873)
"SPEECHES IN THE SENATE, ON AMENDMENT TO THE INTERNAL tax bill, MAY 28 AND JUNE
6, 1862. WHILE voting and speaking against a tax on cotton, Mr. Sumner was ..."