gift in return - traduzione in greco
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gift in return - traduzione in greco

TAX IMPOSED ON THE TRANSFER OF OWNERSHIP OF PROPERTY DURING THE GIVER'S LIFE
Gift Tax; Unified estate and gift tax; Gift taxes; Gift tax in the united states

gift in return      
αντίδωρο
souvenir shop         
  • Campbell County Rockpile Museum gift shop in [[Gillette, Wyoming]]
  • Mugs and glass cups in a gift shop in a zoo in Northeastern Mexico.
STORE PRIMARILY SELLING ITEMS INTENDED TO BE USED AS SOUVENIRS
Gift shops; Gift Shop; Souvenir shop; Souvenir shops
κατάστημα ειδών δώρου, αναμνηστικών, κατάστημα με ενθύμια
gift shop         
  • Campbell County Rockpile Museum gift shop in [[Gillette, Wyoming]]
  • Mugs and glass cups in a gift shop in a zoo in Northeastern Mexico.
STORE PRIMARILY SELLING ITEMS INTENDED TO BE USED AS SOUVENIRS
Gift shops; Gift Shop; Souvenir shop; Souvenir shops
κατάστημα δώρων

Definizione

return
¦ verb
1. come or go back to a place.
(return to) go back to (a state or situation).
(especially of a feeling) come back after a period of absence.
Golf play the last nine holes in a round of eighteen holes.
2. give or send back or put back in place: return the lamb to the oven and add the olives.
feel, say, or do (the same feeling, action, etc.) in response.
(in tennis and other sports) hit or send (the ball) back to an opponent.
American Football intercept (a pass, kick, or fumble by the opposing team) and run upfield with the ball.
3. yield or make (a profit).
4. (of a judge or jury) state or present (a decision or verdict) in response to a formal request.
5. (of an electorate) elect (a person or party) to office.
6. Bridge lead (a card) after taking a trick.
7. Architecture continue (a wall) in a changed direction, especially at right angles.
¦ noun
1. an act or the action of returning.
(also return match or game) a second contest between the same opponents.
a thing which has been returned, especially an unwanted ticket for an event.
2. (also return ticket) Brit. a ticket allowing travel to a place and back again.
3. (also returns) a profit from an investment.
4. an official report or statement submitted in response to a formal demand: census returns.
Law an endorsement or report by a court officer or sheriff on a writ.
5. (also carriage return) a mechanism or key on a typewriter that returns the carriage to a fixed position at the start of a new line.
(also return key) a key pressed on a computer keyboard to simulate a carriage return.
6. an electrical conductor bringing a current back to its source.
7. Architecture a part receding from the line of the front, for example the side of a house or of a window opening.
Phrases
by return (of post) Brit. in the next available mail delivery to the sender.
many happy returns (of the day) a greeting to someone on their birthday.
Derivatives
returnable adjective
returner noun
Origin
ME: the verb from OFr. returner, from L. re- 'back' + tornare 'to turn'; the noun via Anglo-Norman Fr.

Wikipedia

Gift tax in the United States

A gift tax or known originally as inheritance tax is a tax imposed on the transfer of ownership of property during the giver's life. The United States Internal Revenue Service says that a gift is "Any transfer to an individual, either directly or indirectly, where full compensation (measured in money or money's worth) is not received in return."

When a taxable gift in the form of cash, stocks, real estate, gift cards, or other tangible or intangible property is made, the tax is usually imposed on the donor (the giver) unless there is a retention of an interest which delays completion of the gift. A transfer is "completely gratuitous" when the donor receives nothing of value in exchange for the given property. A transfer is "gratuitous in part" when the donor receives some value, but the value of the property received by the donor is substantially less than the value of the property given by the donor. In this case, the amount of the gift is the difference.

In the United States, the gift tax is governed by Chapter 12, Subtitle B of the Internal Revenue Code. The tax is imposed by section 2501 of the Code. For the purposes of taxable income, courts have defined a "gift" as the proceeds from a "detached and disinterested generosity." Gifts are often given out of "affection, respect, admiration, charity or like impulses."

Generally, if an interest in property is transferred during the giver's lifetime (often called an inter vivos gift), then the gift or transfer would not be subject to the estate tax. In 1976, Congress unified the gift and estate tax regimes, thereby limiting the giver's ability to circumvent the estate tax by giving during his or her lifetime. Some differences between estate and gift taxes remain, such as the effective tax rate, the amount of the credit available against tax, and the basis of the received property.

There are also types of gifts which will be included in a person's estate, such as certain gifts made within the three-year window before death and gifts in which the donor retains an interest such as gifts of remainder interests that are not either qualified remainder trusts or charitable remainder trusts. The remainder interest gift tax rules impose the tax on the transfer of the entire value of the trust by assigning a zero value to the interest retained by the donor.