Domicile in a sentence as a noun

Moving your domicile and bank accounts to Singapore might make a lot of sense if you're in Malaysia.

While Facebook is not a domicile, they are a company, and a company can set their own policies.

A business doesn't have to be domiciled in the same location as its headquarters or employees.

And while a stereotype, I think most Americans would prefer to have some sense of personally owned space in their domicile.

One strategy would be to domicile your business in a country that doesn't tax worldwide corporate income, only local income.

Domicile in a sentence as a verb

Windows are essentially just big gaping "serial-killer's enter here" signs, as you can easily break them and gain access to the domicile.

That's the kind of advice that's really easy to give if you happen to be sitting comfortably in a democratic country with the freedom to leave your domicile as you please.

This sounds like a business opportunity all by itself: "virtual domicile hosting" for offshore companies to get access to US services providers.

But that's not legal; my attempt to produce a fake domicile in Nevada for tax purposes when I clearly lived ~11 months of the year in California would be correctly judged a sham.

Domicile definitions

noun

(law) the residence where you have your permanent home or principal establishment and to where, whenever you are absent, you intend to return; every person is compelled to have one and only one domicile at a time; "what's his legal residence?"

noun

housing that someone is living in; "he built a modest dwelling near the pond"; "they raise money to provide homes for the homeless"

See also: dwelling home abode habitation

verb

make one's home in a particular place or community; "may parents reside in Florida"

See also: reside shack domiciliate