What is another word for Taxes?
Use filters to view other words, we have 414 synonyms for taxes.
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- contribution
- cost
- duty
- expense
- fine
- levy
- price
- rate
- tariff
- assessment
- bite
- brokerage
- capitation
- custom
- dues
- excise
- giveaway
- imposition
- impost
- obligation
- salvage
- tithe
- toll
- towage
- tribute
- pork barrel
- charge
- duty
- albatross
- demand
- difficulty
- drain
- imposition
- load
- millstone
- onus
- pressure
- strain
- task
- weight
- deadweight
- assess
- enact
- impose
- charge
- demand
- exact
- extract
- rate
- tithe
- charge duty
- demand toll
- exact tribute
- lay an impost
- require contribution
- exhaust
- overtax
- weaken
- charge
- cumber
- drain
- encumber
- enervate
- lade
- load
- oppress
- overburden
- overuse
- overwork
- pressure
- push
- saddle
- sap
- strain
- stress
- stretch
- task
- tire
- try
- weary
- weigh
- weight
- make demands on
- press hard on
- prey on
- put pressure on
- wear out
- weigh down
- weigh heavily on
- arraign
- blame
- censure
- charge
- criminate
- impeach
- impugn
- impute
- incriminate
- inculpate
- indict
- reproach
- reprove
Roget’s 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
On this page you’ll find 199 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to tax, such as: contribution, cost, duty, expense, fine, and levy.
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How to use tax in a sentence
SYNONYM OF THE DAY
OCTOBER 26, 1985
WORDS RELATED TO TAX
- allege
- apprehend
- arraign
- arrest
- attack
- attribute
- betray
- blame
- blow the whistle
- brand
- bring charges
- censure
- charge
- cite
- complain
- criminate
- denounce
- file claim
- finger
- frame
- hang something on
- hold accountable
- impeach
- implicate
- impute
- incriminate
- inculpate
- indict
- lay at door
- let have it
- libel
- litigate
- lodge complaint
- name
- pin on
- point finger at
- prosecute
- recriminate
- serve summons
- slander
- slur
- sue
- summon
- tax
- amount charge
- demand
- evaluate
- exact
- fix
- impose
- levy
- rate
- tax
- value
- appraises
- apprises
- assays
- checks
- checks out
- computes
- determines
- digs it
- estimates
- figures
- fixes
- gauges
- guesses
- judges
- nicks
- pegs
- rates
- reckons
- sets
- size up
- sizes
- surveys
- takes measure
- valuates
- values
- weighs
- appraising
- apprising
- assaying
- checking
- checking out
- computing
- determining
- digging it
- estimating
- figuring
- fixing
- gauging
- guessing
- judging
- nicking
- pegging
- rating
- reckoning
- setting
- size up
- sizing
- surveying
- taking measure
- valuating
- valuing
- weighing
- appraisal
- charge
- demand
- duty
- estimate
- fee
- levy
- rate
- rating
- tariff
- tax
- taxation
- toll
- valuation
- appraisals
- computations
- determinations
- estimates
- estimations
- judgments
- ratings
- reckonings
- valuations
- value judgments
Roget’s 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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noun
a sum of money demanded by a government for its support or for specific facilities or services, levied upon incomes, property, sales, etc.
a burdensome charge, obligation, duty, or demand.
verb (used with object)
(of a government)
- to demand a tax from (a person, business, etc.).
- to demand a tax in consideration of the possession or occurrence of (income, goods, sales, etc.), usually in proportion to the value of money involved.
to lay a burden on; make serious demands on: to tax one’s resources.
to take to task; censure; reprove; accuse: to tax one with laziness.
Informal. to charge: What did he tax you for that?
Archaic. to estimate or determine the amount or value of.
verb (used without object)
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Origin of tax
1250–1300; (v.) Middle English taxen<Medieval Latin taxāre to tax, appraise, Latin: to appraise, handle, frequentative of tangere to touch; (noun) Middle English, derivative of the v.
OTHER WORDS FROM tax
taxer, nountax·ing·ly, adverbtaxless, adjectivetax·less·ly, adverb
tax·less·ness, nounan·ti·tax, adjectivenon·tax, noun, adjectivenon·tax·er, nounpro·tax, adjectivere·tax, verb (used with object)self-taxed, adjectivesub·tax·er, nounun·der·taxed, adjectiveun·tax, verb (used with object)well-taxed, adjective
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH tax
tacks, tax
Words nearby tax
tawny owl, tawny pipit, tawpie, taws, tawse, tax, taxable, taxaceous, taxation, taxation without representation, Taxation without representation is tyranny
Other definitions for tax (2 of 2)
variant of taxo- before a vowel: taxeme.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Words related to tax
contribution, cost, duty, expense, fine, levy, price, rate, tariff, charge, assess, enact, impose, exhaust, overtax, weaken, assessment, bite, brokerage, capitation
How to use tax in a sentence
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For example, since 2009 it’s been working on a campaign for tax incentives for carbon capture and storage.
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Which is why Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren and others have been calling for raising much more tax money, but primarily from the very wealthy.
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In March, Measure C got 65 percent of the vote, just shy of the two-thirds needed to approve a tax for a specific purpose.
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They could support citizens more efficiently, quickly, and flexibly than current approaches like check payments or tax relief.
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The head of an organization representing such workers blasted the decision as a “scam that leaves workers with a substantial tax bill right after the holiday season,” according to the Washington Post.
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Have you tried to access the research that your tax dollars finance, almost all of which is kept behind a paywall?
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His life as a man is built around health insurance and tax services.
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Cocaine busts, tax cheats, and bribe-taking, born-again Christians: Welcome to the political scandals of 2014.
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In response to the screen quota cut, South Korea established a “cinema tax” on the box office.
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Tax evasion carries a maximum penalty of five years, and thus it seems likely that Grimm would be covered by the provision.
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The law went into operation in England imposing a tax on wearing hair powder.
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In former years, Korea had paid an annual tribute or tax to China, but for some time it had been held back by this king.
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Mr. Jackson supposed that Parliament had a right to tax America, but he much doubted the expediency of the present act.
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In tax-paying circles it is said that the fashionable thing will be to start now and let the airship overtake you if it can.
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The stamps, in remote districts, would frequently require more in postage to obtain than the value of the tax.
British Dictionary definitions for tax
noun
a compulsory financial contribution imposed by a government to raise revenue, levied on the income or property of persons or organizations, on the production costs or sales prices of goods and services, etc
a heavy demand on something; straina tax on our resources
verb (tr)
to levy a tax on (persons, companies, etc, or their incomes, etc)
to make heavy demands on; strainto tax one’s intellect
to accuse, charge, or blamehe was taxed with the crime
to determine (the amount legally chargeable or allowable to a party to a legal action), as by examining the solicitor’s bill of coststo tax costs
Derived forms of tax
taxer, nountaxless, adjective
Word Origin for tax
C13: from Old French taxer, from Latin taxāre to appraise, from tangere to touch
Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Other Idioms and Phrases with tax
In addition to the idiom beginning with tax
- tax with
also see:
- death and taxes
The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.