Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Such gains and losses are often referred to as the hotchpot.
They were something of a hotchpot.
An amusing hotchpot of stolen goods.
These gains and losses do not enter the hotchpot unless the gains exceed the losses.
If the result is gain, both the gain and loss enter the hotchpot and are calculated with any other 1231 gains and losses.
Hotchpot is a slang term referring to the blended group of Section 1231 "Gains and Losses" of the U.S. Tax Code.
While the average taxpayer may have no need to identify "1231 gains and losses" as "Hotchpot gains and losses," that taxpayer likely benefits from the preferential tax treatment.
The hero's consistent, albeit bland n only the young girl has what's required to flavour a confused hotchpot which you watch in the same way as a worthy but boring foreign film.
Without the firepot mechanism, which prevents the $50,000 loss from being included in the hotchpot, B would have to offset this $100,000 gain with the $50,000 loss.
In property law, hotchpot (sometimes referred to as hotchpotch or the hotchpotch rule) refers to the blending or combining of property in order to ensure equality of division.
Gallimaufry comes from the French; so, ironically, does "hodgepodge", which the OED informs me is a variation of hotchpotch, from hotchpot, from hochepot - an Anglo-Norman word.
- The Trunk Statute is enforceable to inter vivo deals before the decease, so instead of going into hotchpot after the testator's death as with the Forced Heirship, the Trunk Relative can sue the annulment of the gratis acts of disposition.
The CC is in force about succession in general and forced heirship in particular, with the exception that, for the sake of the Homestead indivision -unless an opposite provision by the testator-, the descendants and ascendants successors in the Homestead are not going into hotchpot.
The term hutspot (which can be roughly translated as "shaken pot") is similar to the English term hotchpot and Middle French hochepot, both of which used to identify a type of meat-and-barley stew that became synonymous with a confused jumble of mixture, later referred to as hotchpotch or hodge-podge.