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29 Sentences With "paying the penalty"

How to use paying the penalty in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "paying the penalty" and check conjugation/comparative form for "paying the penalty". Mastering all the usages of "paying the penalty" from sentence examples published by news publications.

So he said he was seriously considering dropping insurance and paying the penalty.
It is those self-employed individuals, those small businesses that are paying the penalty for this.
If people don't sign up because they aren't worried about paying the penalty, the markets could struggle.
Nearly 80 percent of households paying the penalty make less than $85033,000 per year, according to the IRS.
The majority of those who had been paying the penalty made under $50,000 dollars a year, according to the IRS.
Even in the event of paying the penalty for an early withdrawal, the effective yield would be more than 1 percent.
That allows more people to avoid paying the penalty for lacking insurance in 2017, which is $695 or higher per person.
If there's no advantage to paying the penalty, everyone will sign up, and the rest of the problems will work themselves out.
An executive order would only broaden the exemptions to paying the penalty but it's possible that the mandate will be repealed entirely.
If they don't, filers either had to claim an exemption from the mandate, or indicate that they are paying the penalty for not complying.
Agents asked whether the department had a policy prohibiting a charitable foundation from paying the penalty, said Jamal Nielsen, a spokesman for the department.
The tax agency said it would accept and process tax returns even if taxpayers failed to indicate whether they had coverage, qualified for an exemption or were paying the penalty for going without insurance.
Republicans said repealing the individual mandate would provide tax relief to the middle class, pointing to IRS data that shows most people paying the penalty for not buying insurance are low- and middle-income taxpayers.
Trump's order would likely expand the "hardship exemptions" from the individual mandate, which allows people to avoid paying the penalty — $695 or 2.5 percent of their income, whichever is higher — if they demonstrate they can't afford insurance.
Anyone who complies with the federal mandate by obtaining insurance or paying the penalty to the IRS wouldn't owe anything to the states, but people who ignore the federal law thinking that the IRS won't come after them will face state tax collectors instead.
An estimated 4.5 percent of taxpayers paid the penalty in 2015, and nearly 3503 percent of those who did earned less than $50,000 in 2015 — though the Kaiser Family Foundation found that a sizable amount of low-income Americans paying the penalty could find coverage for less.
Scott-Morton put these numbers in her original draft, but says she could see slightly smaller fines working in Connecticut — anything larger than the penalities in the original law would do more work to push those 60,000 Connecticut residents paying the penalty to sign up for coverage instead.
In a consent order signed on Friday, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) agreed to let ETC Northeast Pipeline resume construction of its 40.5-mile natural gas pipeline in western Pennsylvania upon the company paying the penalty and ending its appeals of regulators' pollution and safety orders.
Underworld (also released as Paying the Penalty) is a 1927 American silent crime film directed by Josef von Sternberg. The film launched Sternberg's eight-year collaboration with Paramount Pictures, with whom he would produce his seven films with actress Marlene Dietrich. Journalist and screenwriter Ben Hecht won an Academy Award for Best Original Story.
Leach announced that he would appeal the fine. Tech alumni and fans began raising money to aid Leach in paying the penalty in the event that it was upheld. Optionally, the proceeds raised could be used charitably. So, just before Christmas 2007, Leach requested that the nearly $5,000 raised to that point be spent on 400 hams to be given free to families in Lubbock, Texas.
In the 11th and 12th centuries a new, legalistic theory of penances had crept in, as satisfying the divine justice and paying the penalty for the "temporal punishment due to sin". This was followed by a new theory of a treasury of merits which was first put forward around 1230. As a means of paying this penalty, the practice grew of granting indulgences for various good works, drawing on “the treasury of the Church's merits”. These indulgences later began to be sold, leading to Martin Luther's dramatic protest.
Its episcopal list (325-680) is given in Gams (p. 436). It was also a Latin see for a brief period during the Crusades (1099–1100). In the time of Roman Emperor Flavius Julius Constantius (337-361), its Bishop — later Saint — Marcus of Arethusa, destroyed a heathen temple which under the apostate Emperor Julian he was ordered to rebuild. To avoid this he fled from the city, but eventually returned to save the Christian people from paying the penalty in his stead, and underwent very cruel treatment at the hands of the pagan mob (Sozomen, Historia Ecclesiastica, x, 10) in 362.
915-916[Pius Bonifacius Gams, Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae, Leipzig 1931, p. 436] In the time of Roman emperor Constantius II (337–361), Bishop Marcus (Mark) of Arethusa was authorized to replace a pagan temple in the city with a Christian church. Under Julian the Apostate (361–363), he was ordered to rebuild the temple. To avoid doing so he fled from the city, but returned to save the Christian people from paying the penalty in his stead, and in 362 underwent very cruel treatment at the hands of the pagan mob, as recounted by Theodoret and Sozomen.
Mezu, p. 214. Some have also argued that all of Okonkwo's failures are tied to his contempt and fear of women and his inability to form quality personal relationships with the women in his life—his wives, his children, and his own mother. Achebe has expressed frustration at frequently being misunderstood on this point, saying that "I want to sort of scream that Things Fall Apart is on the side of women ... And that Okonkwo is paying the penalty for his treatment of women; that all his problems, all the things he did wrong, can be seen as offenses against the feminine."Thompson, Bob (9 March 2008).
One pair of contestants (or a solo player) were selected to perform a certain task, which could be anything. They earn one dollar for every second they were on the stage, and, unless they are paying the penalty, may quit out at any time. If at any time one or both players make a mistake, they have to pay a penalty. For example, one player is placed on a slide that goes down towards a small above-ground swimming pool, and the partner has to pick one of five telephone numbers on the list, one of which nobody on the other side will be available to answer.
In Riddles, Schiller gives historical examples of the dangers of abstract metaphysics in the philosophies of Plato, Zeno, and Hegel, portraying Hegel as the worst offender: "Hegelianism never anywhere gets within sight of a fact, or within touch of reality. And the reason is simple: you cannot, without paying the penalty, substitute abstractions for realities; the thought-symbol cannot do duty for the thing symbolized".Schiller, F.C.S. (1891) Riddles of the Sphinx, p. 160 Schiller argued that the flaw in Hegel's system, as with all systems of abstract metaphysics, is that the world it constructs always proves to be unhelpful in guiding our imperfect, changing, particular, and physical lives to the achievement of the "higher" universal Ideals and Ends.
Frank Paroubek was quoted as saying, "My little girl is at rest and nothing matters to her now, but I shall never rest until I see her murderers paying the penalty for taking her life.""Little Girl Sought By Schoolmates Found Dead: Officials Think Murder." Rockford Daily Register-Gazette, May 12, 1911, p. 1."Thousands at Bier of Murdered Child: Great Crowd Assembles at Home of Paroubek Family to Witness Ceremonies at Funeral of 5-Year-Old Victim of Unknown Slayer." The Inter-Ocean, 1911-05-12, p. 1. Chicago Chief of Police John McWeeny, taken by a Chicago Daily News photographer in 1911 and possibly published in the newspaper. Chicago Daily News negatives collection, DN-0057767. Courtesy of Chicago History Museum.
Countries face a penalty if they default, and whenever they are supposed to make debt payments, they consider whether they would be better off by defaulting, paying the penalty, and be forever barred from international credit markets, or pay the debt installment, borrowing again, and making the same decision next period. As the probability of default is higher when debt is higher, there exists a level of lending that maximises expected return to the lender, and so the credit ceiling will depend on the probability of default. If desired lending is higher than the credit ceiling, some countries will not receive funds, and credit rationing will occur. This setting is reminiscent of Stiglitz and Weiss, as the interest rate has an incentive effect, and does not play the standard allocational role prices are supposed to play.
In Calvinism, salvation depends on Christ's active obedience, obeying the laws and commands of God the Father, and passive obedience, enduring the punishment of the crucifixion suffering all the just penalties due to men for their sins. The two are seen as distinct but inseparable; passive obedience on its own only takes men back to the state of Adam before the Fall. Reformed theologian, Louis Berkhof helpfully wrote: "His active obedience consists in all that He did to observe the law in behalf of sinners, as a condition for obtaining eternal life; and His passive obedience in all that He suffered in paying the penalty of sin and thus discharging the debt of all his people."(Manual of Christian Doctrine 215) The Scottish theologian John Cameron's support for passive obedience at the start of the 17th century meant that he was principal of the University of Glasgow for less than a year in 1622.

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