Caution! The site can't guarantee, that text has age permission. The site is not recommended, if you are less than 18 years old.
The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... Divorce law is controlled by state law, which means that each of our diverse states has a different set of rules and statutes for how property and spousal support is handled upon a divorce. It does not matter where you live when you get married or even where you live during most of your marriage. What matters is the state in which you reside in the years leading up to your divorce. For example, a stay-at-home mother could unwittingly sacrifice significant spousal support by moving with her musician husband from Los Angeles, California (a great music town with even greater alimony rules) to Austin, Texas (another great music town, but with a stingy alimony statute). ... "
" ... Earned income does not include passive income, which means income that you aren’t actively generating on your own, like interest and dividends. It doesn’t include pay that you receive while incarcerated, retirement income, Social Security, unemployment benefits and alimony. It also doesn’t include child support: Remember, that’s tax neutral. ... "
" ... Other income would also be split, with each spouse having to depend on their own Social Security and any separate pension income. In cases where one spouse has the majority of the annual income stream, it’s not unusual for a judge to require that alimony be paid to equal out the disparity. ... "
" ... Second, as Governor Ricketts indicated, the FAFSA (and no doubt state financial aid forms) requires intimate financial and personal information —not only about family income, but also debts, alimony, etc., that the government has no inherent right to have, but would gain under the Louisiana approach. ... "
" ... “The way the prior law treated alimony payments was a useful tool in settlement negotiations because the recipient is usually in a lower tax bracket than the payor," says Jessica Woll, a managing partner of Woll & Woll, a Michigan family law firm. "The tax deduction gave the payor a break.” ... "