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deduction

/dih-duhk-shuhn/US // dɪˈdʌk ʃən //UK // (dɪˈdʌkʃən) //

扣减,扣税,扣款,扣减法

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the act or process of deducting; subtraction.
    • : something that is or may be deducted: She took deductions for a home office and other business expenses from her taxes.
    • : the act or process of deducing.
    • : something that is deduced: His astute deduction was worthy of Sherlock Holmes.
    • : Logic. a process of reasoning in which a conclusion follows necessarily from the premises presented, so that the conclusion cannot be false if the premises are true.a conclusion reached by this process.Compare induction.

Synonyms & Antonyms

nounconclusion, understanding

Examples

  • Tim Scott, a Republican senator from South Carolina, introduced the deduction, claiming it would help restaurants and restaurant workers who have been struggling since the beginning of the pandemic.

  • In addition to avoiding wage taxes, businesses can accelerate tax deductions for some AI when it has a physical component or falls under certain exceptions for software.

  • In other words, employers can claim a large portion of the cost of some AI up front as a tax deduction.

  • If you squeeze the last drop of deduction from the puzzle conditions, you won’t have too many trial-and–error candidates to search through.

  • In addition, the TCJA gives individuals several tax breaks—an increased child tax credit and standard deduction, for example—that are scheduled to expire at the end of 2025.

  • That would have involved overturning a 1977 Court decision that upheld automatic deduction of union dues.

  • True, making an Item 24 deduction requires me to “Attach Form 2106.”

  • The devil was predictably in the details, with a surcharge on the rich and a call to end the state and local tax deduction.

  • Apparently, not much has really changed since Bill took a $2 tax deduction for each pair of underwear that he donated to charity.

  • To my mind, this is why we should get rid of the corporate income tax--and the charitable tax deduction as well.

  • This was considered by the Post-office Department as an average deduction of 53 per cent.

  • The amount so collected was to be paid to the tithe-owners, subject to a deduction of three per cent.

  • Does he prove that criminal procedure against the colonies would fail, by sign or by deduction?

  • The great conclusions are reached by the certain methods of elimination and deduction.

  • No more logical deduction was possible than this commencement of decentralization within the Prussian monarchy.