Bounty Related Category: Economics: Terms and Concepts amount paid by a government for the achievement of certain economic or other goals. It often takes the form of a premium paid for the increased production or export of certain goods.
A bounty or bonus above a regular price, paid as an incentive to do something. 2. The price of insurance protection for a specified risk for a specified period of time.
Mutiny on the Bounty A Midsummer Night's Dream Les Misérables Alfred Hitchcock's The 39 Steps Anna Karenina Judy Garland signs a contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM).
Otherwise known as a bounty hunter, this person is paid a fee by the bail agent to track down and retrieve a defendant who has skipped (i.e. left the area without appearing in court as promised).
regards a subsidy as a bounty or grant paid for the manufacture, production, or export of an article. Export subsidies are contingent on exports; domestic subsidies are conferred on production without reference to exports.
Questions of undue influence typically arise when a will deals unjustly with persons believed to be the natural objects of the testator's bounty.
I will agree on the TP, gotta be Charmin for me. Gotta be Bounty in the kitchen. Above that, I will splurge on toiletries, no Suave or White Rain in my shower. Rating: Patrick says: ...
Thus, "land" in the economists' sense means not only the dry portion of the earth's surface, but also all those natural resources such as mineral deposits, wild plants and animals, soil fertility, surface water, solar energy and the bounty of the ...
The policy was severely criticized by Adam Smith, and it does in fact amount to a bounty on the coinage of gold. The amount is, however, too insignificant to deserve attention, especially as there are compensating gains.
See also: Expense, Disclaimer, Dependence, Administration, Saving
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