Advertisement
Advertisement
excise
1[ek-sahyz, -sahys, ek-sahyz, ik-sahyz]
noun
an internal tax or duty on certain commodities, as liquor or tobacco, levied on their manufacture, sale, or consumption within the country.
a tax levied for a license to carry on certain employments, pursue certain sports, etc.
British., the branch of the civil service that collects excise taxes.
verb (used with object)
to impose an excise on.
excise
2[ik-sahyz]
verb (used with object)
to expunge, as a passage or sentence, from a text.
to cut out or off, as a tumor.
excise
1noun
Also called: excise tax. a tax on goods, such as spirits, produced for the home market
a tax paid for a licence to carry out various trades, sports, etc
that section of the government service responsible for the collection of excise, now part of HMRC
excise
2/ ɪkˈsaɪz, ɪkˈsɪʒən /
verb
to delete (a passage, sentence, etc); expunge
to remove (an organ, structure, or part) surgically
Other Word Forms
- excisable adjective
- excision noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of excise1
Word History and Origins
Origin of excise1
Origin of excise2
Example Sentences
"On top of that, captains will be having to deal with customs and excise and paperwork around the cargo and immigration."
In 2022, when the cannabis industry agreed to increase the excise tax, quarterly cannabis sales were at their peak.
Congress could increase the excise tax on vaccines, she said, or pass a law limiting what’s on the injury table.
Experts say that, regardless of the excise tax reprieve and the included grandfather provisions, the clean energy industry will be badly hurt and consumers’ energy prices could rise by eight to 10 percent.
"Legal tobacco products in the UK are subject to some of the highest excise taxes in the world," he says.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse