tax roll

  • 11roll over — vt 1 a: to defer payment of (an obligation) b: to renegotiate the terms of (a financial agreement) 2: to place (invested funds) in a new investment of the same kind roll over IRA funds Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law …

    Law dictionary

  • 12roll-over relief — When certain business assets are sold and the consideration is used to acquire a new business asset, roll over relief may, at the election of the taxpayer, be available on any gain made at the election of the taxpayer on the disposal. The gain on …

    Law dictionary

  • 13roll-back — UK US (also rollback) noun [C] ► an occasion when the influence of particular laws, rules, etc. is reduced: »The telephone company has asked for a roll back of leasing rules. ► FINANCE a reduction of prices, costs, taxes, etc., especially so that …

    Financial and business terms

  • 14roll-up fund — noun An offshore fund which returns interest earned from bank deposits back into the fund rather than paying it out to investors, so avoiding incurring income tax • • • Main Entry: ↑roll …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 15roll|o|ver — «ROHL OH vuhr», noun. 1. a rolling over, especially of an automobile; overturn: »the impact of a 70 mph rollover. 2. Commerce. a) a deferment of payment, as of a tax or loan. b) the period of such a deferment …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 16roll — /roʊl / (say rohl) verb (i) 1. to move along a surface by turning over and over, as a ball or a wheel. 2. to move or be moved on wheels, as a vehicle or its occupants. 3. to move onwards or advance in a stream or with an undulating motion, as… …

  • 17Tax revolt — A tax revolt is a political struggle to repeal, limit, or roll back a government imposed tax.1930s, The Great DepressionIn the United States, it is often used to refer to a series of anti tax state initiative campaigns. The first significant wave …

    Wikipedia

  • 18roll — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 bread ADJECTIVE ▪ bread ▪ crusty, soft ▪ dinner, finger (BrE), kaiser (AmE), morning (BrE) …

    Collocations dictionary

  • 19roll sth over — UK US roll sth over Phrasal Verb with roll({{}}/rəʊl/ verb ► FINANCE to move something such as an amount of money from one place to another: roll sth over into sth »Investors can roll over their maximum £9,000 stake into a new tax free account.… …

    Financial and business terms

  • 20Roll — Recorded as Role, Roll, Rule, Rolls, Rolles, Rolse, Rowles, and others as shown below, this is a medieval English surname which with the suffix s is a patronymic meaning son of . However its origins are both 11th century Norman French and pre 6th …

    Surnames reference