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 excise [ek'saiz]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. (烟、酒等)消费税, 货物税, 国产税

vt. 切除

[医] 切除

[经] 消费税, 货物税, 执照税


  1. The censor insisted on excising the passage from the film.
    电影审查员坚持剪去影片的这一段.
  2. The surgeon excised the lump from her breast.
    外科医生切除了她乳房的肿块.
  3. The censor insist on excise the passage from the film.
    电影审查员坚持剪去影片的这一段。


excise
[ noun ]
  1. a tax that is measured by the amount of business done (not on property or income from real estate)

  2. <noun.possession>
[ verb ]
  1. remove by erasing or crossing out or as if by drawing a line

  2. <verb.contact> expunge scratch strike
    Please strike this remark from the record
    scratch that remark
  3. levy an excise tax on

  4. <verb.possession>
  5. remove by cutting

  6. <verb.change>
    The surgeon excised the tumor


Excise \Ex*cise"\, n. [Apparently fr. L. excisum cut off, fr.
excidere to cut out or off; ex out, off + caedere to cut; or,
as the word was formerly written accise, fr. F. accise, LL.
accisia, as if fr. L. accidere, accisum, to cut into; ad +
caedere to cut; but prob. transformed fr. OF. assise, LL.
assisa, assisia, assize. See {Assize}, {Concise}.]
1. In inland duty or impost operating as an indirect tax on
the consumer, levied upon certain specified articles, as,
tobacco, ale, spirits, etc., grown or manufactured in the
country. It is also levied to pursue certain trades and
deal in certain commodities. Certain direct taxes (as, in
England, those on carriages, servants, plate, armorial
bearings, etc.), are included in the excise. Often used
adjectively; as, excise duties; excise law; excise system.

The English excise system corresponds to the
internal revenue system in the United States.
--Abbot.

An excise . . . is a fixed, absolute, and direct
charge laid on merchandise, products, or
commodities. --11 Allen's
(Mass. ) Rpts.

2. That department or bureau of the public service charged
with the collection of the excise taxes. [Eng.]


Excise \Ex*cise"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Excised}; p. pr. & vb.
n. {Excising}.]
1. To lay or impose an excise upon.

2. To impose upon; to overcharge. [Prov. Eng.]


Excise \Ex*cise"\, v. t. [See {Excide}.]
To cut out or off; to separate and remove; as, to excise a
tumor.

  1. Sen. Paul Simon, D-Ill., who is not campaigning in the Super Tuesday states, favors doubling the excise tax on cigarettes.
  2. In addition, the industry is expected to report a total 5% decline in shipments for the first quarter because of the doubling of the federal excise tax on beer.
  3. Mitchell said Senate Democrats will not link their IRA proposal to such an increase, but rather will propose to make up revenue lost to expanded IRA deductions by extending telephone and other excise taxes that were due to expire at the end of this year.
  4. The rises in excise taxes on gasoline, alcohol and tobacco were roughly in line with inflation, Major said.
  5. The study found: _The poorest 20 percent of four-member families, averaging income of $8,581, paid 5.4 percent of their earnings in sales and excise taxes last year.
  6. Earlier this week, Ways and Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowski also said that excise taxes on such items as gasoline, beer and cigarettes wouldn't be boosted.
  7. Mr. Miller told the Ways and Means panel that the White House wouldn't agree to a federal excise tax boost "unless you could make the argument that it was a tax on what economists call a negative externality."
  8. The study focused on general sales taxes and on excise taxes, chiefly those on gasoline and tobacco.
  9. "With the five-cent increase in the gasoline excise tax, we have no doubt there will be an incentive to cheat," said Shirley D. Peterson, the assistant attorney general who heads the Justice Department's tax division.
  10. The poor in South Dakota and Mississippi pay about seven times as much of their earnings in sales and excise taxes as do the rich; and in Tennessee, Alabama and Louisiana, almost six times as much.
  11. STET proponent Lawrence Summers of Harvard, who believes a decrease in volume will cut down on volatility, cheers the idea that the excise tax will "throw sand in the gears" of a market that works too well.
  12. It's hardly surprising, but a survey has found that people will go to great lengths to avoid taxes, even crossing state lines to pay lower sales and excise taxes.
  13. He was, until his promotion, responsible for excise duties on tobacco, oil and gambling. Outside Customs, Brown spent two years on secondment as an adviser to the government of Barbados.
  14. Most strikingly, Arizona completed a fitful legislative session of its own recently by effectively raising income, property and excise taxes instead of curbing spending. Republicans engineered this one.
  15. Although details of the package were sketchy, Sen. Bob Packwood, R-Ore., said it included higher excise taxes on alcohol but otherwise resembled the taxes Bush proposed in his January budget.
  16. The Ashland, Ky., petroleum refiner's revenue, excluding excise taxes, rose to $1.8 billion.
  17. A pamphlet aimed at brewery workers says the PAC will fight increased excise taxes on beer, which it says "could mean fewer jobs."
  18. Despite Proxmire's concern that the bank _ not LaWare _ is obligated to pay a special excise tax on a portion of the pay agreement, there was no indication the issue would affect LaWare's nomination.
  19. This is primarily due to the increases in excise duties, and the people involved are typically working age people not currently in the labour market who do not benefit from the tax changes.
  20. Du Plessis announced that the general sales tax, already one of the world's highest, would rise from 12 percent to 13 percent and said excise taxes on liquor and cigarettes also would increase.
  21. Mr. Miller strongly suggested that the administration might favor the idea of raising the federal excise tax on cigarettes.
  22. It is not just the poor who spend a disproportionate share on sales and excise taxes, such as those applying to alcohol, gasoline and tobacco, the study found.
  23. He just has, in his home state." The vice president indicated he would go even further than President Reagan in ruling out all forms of new taxes, including excise taxes.
  24. As a share of income, he states, sales and excise taxes take five times as much from poor families _ and three times more out of middle-income families _ as they take from the rich.
  25. The appeals court remanded the case to U.S. District Court to excise those two categories from the preliminary injunction and return the case to the appeals court for further consideration.
  26. "For affluent Americans, a new energy tax would be the equivalent of a luxury excise tax: mildly irritating but bearable."
  27. To find a tax going down, you'd have to go to Indiana, where drivers were registering their vehicles out of state to avoid excise taxes.
  28. Sources who sought anonymity told The Associated Press that some officials opposed the idea of a recreational excise tax as a violation of the president's pledge of "no new taxes."
  29. The halving of car tax will cost about Pounds 635m in 1992-93, and Pounds 765m in the following year. Excise Duties I turn now to excise duties.
  30. His bill would repeal the occupational tax on volunteers and the excise tax on funds raised by wagering that are used for charitable purposes.
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