Money that a party is entitled to keep under one tax provision, but which is taken from them by another tax provision, A rule that permits a party to take back evidentiary materials that were mistakenly turned over to the other party, but to which the other party would not have been entitled, Any recovery of a performance-related payment based on discovery that the performance was not genuine, A practice whereby a pension scheme will offset an amount equivalent to the state pension against a target pension so as to arrive at the amount payable by the scheme If commission is paid to an intermediary by a financial institution for the introduction of business and this does not stay in force for a certain pre-determined period a part of the commission may be repayable to the institution This is known as 'clawback' The practice is more prevalent among insurance companies, A clawback obligation represents the general partner's promise that, over the life of the fund, the managers will not receive a greater share of the fund's distributions than they bargained for Generally, this means that the general partner may not keep distributions representing more than a specified percentage (e g , 20%) of the fund's cumulative profits, if any When triggered, the clawback will require that the general partner return to the fund's limited partners an amount equal to what is determined to be "excess" distributions Click here for more detail, Flattering; sycophantic, finding a way to take money back from people that they were given in another way; "the Treasury will find some clawback for the extra benefits members received", Terms of sale enabling the vendor to receive, in defined circumstances, a proportion of any subsequent profit made by the purchaser after sale - for example following the disposal of surplus land or other assets, or if the purchaser disposes of the business, This term refers to the amount of Old Age Security (OAS) payments that are repaid through a special tax on high income pensions, To flatter, A flatterer or sycophant, If a government claws back money, it finds a way of taking money back from people that it gave money to in another way. The Chancellor will try to claw back £3.5 billion in next year's Budget, If someone claws back some of the money or power they had lost, they get some of it back again. They will eventually be able to claw back all or most of the debt,
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Money that a party is entitled to keep under one tax provision, but which is taken from them by another tax provision
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A rule that permits a party to take back evidentiary materials that were mistakenly turned over to the other party, but to which the other party would not have been entitled
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Any recovery of a performance-related payment based on discovery that the performance was not genuine - "The airline got a clawback provision in the event of failure of the engines to meet fuel-consumption targets."
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A practice whereby a pension scheme will offset an amount equivalent to the state pension against a target pension so as to arrive at the amount payable by the scheme If commission is paid to an intermediary by a financial institution for the introduction of business and this does not stay in force for a certain pre-determined period a part of the commission may be repayable to the institution This is known as 'clawback' The practice is more prevalent among insurance companies
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A clawback obligation represents the general partner's promise that, over the life of the fund, the managers will not receive a greater share of the fund's distributions than they bargained for Generally, this means that the general partner may not keep distributions representing more than a specified percentage (e g , 20%) of the fund's cumulative profits, if any When triggered, the clawback will require that the general partner return to the fund's limited partners an amount equal to what is determined to be "excess" distributions Click here for more detail
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Flattering; sycophantic
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finding a way to take money back from people that they were given in another way; "the Treasury will find some clawback for the extra benefits members received"
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Terms of sale enabling the vendor to receive, in defined circumstances, a proportion of any subsequent profit made by the purchaser after sale - for example following the disposal of surplus land or other assets, or if the purchaser disposes of the business
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This term refers to the amount of Old Age Security (OAS) payments that are repaid through a special tax on high income pensions
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To flatter
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A flatterer or sycophant
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claw back
If a government claws back money, it finds a way of taking money back from people that it gave money to in another way. The Chancellor will try to claw back £3.5 billion in next year's Budget
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claw back
If someone claws back some of the money or power they had lost, they get some of it back again. They will eventually be able to claw back all or most of the debt
Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada Clawback kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. Clawback kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan Clawback kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.