Sentence examples for imposed on very from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

A temporary tax surcharge was imposed on very high earners.

A tax will be imposed on very costly health insurance plans to give an incentive to avoid policies with generous coverage, and payments reduced to certain Medicare plans and to providers such as hospitals.

On top of that, we have the extension of the penny-pinching presumption of shared living, which the old Tories imposed on very young people (in order to try and encourage more of them to stay in the family home) to people as old as 35 who, presumably, are already likely to have flown the family nest.

Subsequently, internal travel times c j are computed from d j by means of a function in which effective travel speeds in km/h are obtained with the fitted function 10.66 + 13.04 ln (d j ), with a minimum of 5 km/h imposed on very small zones (for details on the fitted function see [38]).

Similar(56)

On 25 August, after taking our urgent message on climate change seriously, the judge and court imposed on us very modest fines, ranging from £300 to £700 each and adding up to a total of £4,000-£5,000.

With the taxation of graduate students' tuition remission gone, the most onerous provision for MIT will be an "excise tax" — a new type of income tax imposed on a very small number of colleges and universities — equal to 1.4percentt of MIT's annual investment income.

The researchers claim that they have proved that "emotional states can be transferred to others via emotional contagion, leading people to experience the same emotions without their awareness". The effect was slight, but imposed on a very large population, so it's possible the effects were consequential to some people.

The ethical and legal wrongs of Hackgate happened with a backdrop of the English judiciary turning a developing media respect to the right for privacy into a notorious censorship law prohibiting the publication of truth through secret injunction, with injunctions imposed on the very existence of an injunction (the super-injunction).

We pay for a high degree of "income maintenance" and have imposed on ourselves a very high degree of rigidity in respect to labor costs.

"We've resisted the notion of a doctrine, because we don't think you can impose one model on very different countries; that gets you into trouble and can lead you to intervene in places that you shouldn't," said Ben Rhodes, the director for strategic communications at the National Security Council.

Importantly, the differing temporal and spatial resolutions of individual methods are not merely technical constraints that invariably compel cautionary interpretation of changes in the extracellular concentrations of neurotransmitters, but these resolutions impose on the very conceptualization of the functions of neurochemically defined groups of neurons.

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