21 Words to use with fees

I will hold rain and frost, heat and cold, storm and sun, in fee simple for the race.

There were four principal sources of revenue; the customs, the excise, the sale of fee-farm rents, of the lands of the crown, and of those belonging to the bishops, deans, and chapters, and the sequestration and forfeiture of the estates of papists and delinquents.

Nay, that's plain in Littleton; for if that fee-simple and fee-tail be put together, it is called hotch-potch.

"Fee-faw-fum," says he, "I smell the blood of an Irishman.

We don't know what kind of fee dis we hab at all; for we attorney, Mr. Tate, neber come on we property, leave all to Mr. Comeoy.

By way of showing that even without a levy on capital the rich man bears his share of the burdens of the State, Sir EDWARD CARSON remarked that, when he receives a retainer, he immediately allows for the super-tax and enters it in his fee-book at only half the amount.

Where shall the poor wretch reduced to the last despair, to whom acquittal perhaps comes just time enough to save him from perishing,where shall this man find leisure, and much less money, to fee counsel and officers, and purchase the tedious dear-bought remedy of the law?

Also, he knew by inference at least, that these three men had been approached, not without success, and that House Bill Twenty-nine, with its fee-gathering amendment, was safely shelved.

The poor Indians are without advice or counsel to aid them, for they have no means to fee lawyers, but they will evidently find firm friends in the House ready to do them justice.

He is a fee-layer, a partner, a man who lays his fee (property) alongside yours.

The word filibuster comes from the Spanish "fee-lee-bote," English "fly-boat," a small, swift sailing-vessel with a large mainsail, which enabled the buccaneers to pursue merchantmen in the open sea and escape among the shoals and shallows of the archipelago when pursued in their turn by men-of-war.

Surplus communion fee money, or communion offerings were devoted to the care of the poor and other expenses.

PAUL'S What can be hop'd from Priests who, 'gainst the Poor, For lack of two-pence, shut the church's door; Who, true successors of the ancient leaven, Erect a turnpike on the road to Heaven? "Knock, and it shall be open'd," saith our LORD; "Knock, and pay two-pence," say the Chapter Board: The Showman of the booth the fee receives, And God's house is again a "den of thieves.

So your magnificent fee shrinks to seven hundred thousand dollars, less your expenses.

Co. Tenant per la Curtesie d'Engleterre est, hon home prent feme seisie in fee simple ou en fee taile generall, ou seisie come heire de la taile speciall et ad issue per mesme la fame, male ou female, oies ou wife, soit lissue apres mort ou en vie si la feme de aie, la baron tiendra la terre durant sa vie, per la ley dengleterre.

Let us give a benefit concert, admission fee ad libitum!' "The suggestion found hearty approval.

The daybreak lighted up her face All pink, and sharp, and emerald-eyed; She looked on them a little space, And shrill as hautboy cried: "O three tall footsore men of rags Which walking this gold morn I see, What will ye give me from your bags For fairy kisses three?" The first, that was a reddish man, Out of his bundle takes a crust: "La, by the tombstones of St. Ann, There's fee, if fee ye must!"

Then the Interesting Man, having got the table where he wanted it, had said: "I remember when I was last in Sofiaby the way it is pronounced Say-ah-fee-ahtalking with Radovitchor Radee-ah-vitch, as it should be soundedthe foreign secretary, on what the Sobranjeit is pronounced Soophrangeewould be likely to do"and by the time he had done with the Sobranje no one dared speak of the war any more.

The fee alsoa much less agreeable alterationhad been, I saw, considerably reduced; in accordance, doubtless, with the attorney's appreciation of the difference of value between a silk and a stuff gown.

The want of a uniform fee bill, prescribing the compensation to be allowed district attorneys, clerks, marshals, and commissioners in civil and criminal cases, is the cause of much vexation, injustice, and complaint.

Poor lit-tle Wil-lie re-turn-ed from the for-est la-den with as much wood as his fee-ble strength could bear.

21 Words to use with  fees