Semantic ambiguity
SEMANTIC AMBIGUITY This answer is supported on page 50.
When you are due a refund and fail to file your income tax return to claim the refund amount that you are due they do not charge the penalty because if you fail to claim the amount it will eventually be lost.
It means there is an outstanding debt for some goods or services you have received.
If you're talking about federal taxes, the IRS could file for you. Depending on your circumstances, this could be at the maximum tax rate. If you are due a refund, you can't claim it if you don't file within 3 years of the due date.
You can claim single with no exemptions, on your W-4 form in order to have more tax taken out during the year. You even have the option of having additional amounts taken out on top of this is desired. It really doesn't matter what your exemption are as long as you don't claim more than you actually have. The tax return is what really matters as far as paying taxes due.
SEMANTIC AMBIGUITY This answer is supported on page 50.
due to
Ambiguity is a word used to describe an uncertainty of something. A good sentence would be, there seems to be no ambiguity in this part of the textbook.
droit
Syntactic ambiguity
indifferance (or bored) due to repeatation!!
No. The expression " due to" must not start a sentence, although it is certainly done by very many careless speakers. Proper use of "due to" is as an adjectival phrase modifying the subject of the phrase or sentence: This shortfall is due to a loss.
The word 'claim' IS a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for an assertion of the truth of something; a demand or request for something considered one's due. Example: He has provided documentation for his claim of ownership. The noun forms for the verb to claim areˈclaimant and the gerund, claiming.
OK, need to re-word that a bit due to restrictions on asking a question on this site. If only we could use commas and other characters."Is a hypothesis, the phrase immediately following the word 'then', called the hypothesis of a statement?"No, the phrase immediately following the word "then" is the conclusion. They hypothesis is the phrase following the word "if".However, answering the rest of the question, the hypothesis would be called the hypothesis of a statement.
A word or phrase that has a negative or disliked association connected to it, most commonly due to social use or misconceptions of a word or it's meaning.
"Raining tulips" does not have a common rhyming word pair due to the uniqueness of the phrase. Trying to force a rhyme might dilute the imagery and meaning evoked by the original phrase.
The noun forms for the verb to claim are claimant and the gerund, claiming.The word 'claim' is a noun form, a singular, common, abstract noun as a word for an assertion of the truth of something even though there is no definite proof; a demand or request for something considered one's due; a statement that you have the legal right to something.