Remit in a sentence as a noun

Amazon failed to collect/remit ~270M in sales tax in Texas and has owed millions for years.

If that store had to charge you sales tax and remit it to California, they'd simply say "no thanks" to your business.

We have a remit from Wellcome, and the other funders, to build products that go beyond academic journals.

They should remove themselves from the content purchasing market if the terms are too restrictive to allow them to meet their public remit.

However, these aphasias are known to remit and studies show that other portions of the brain have taken over from the damaged portion.

Hawala and other informal networks are accounted for 40% of the remittances sent every year.

Remit in a sentence as a verb

This is virtually universal for sales taxes in the United States -- they're all paired with "use taxes" which you're supposed to calculate and remit yourself.

Of all the financial mistakes you can possibly make running a company, withholding payroll taxes and then failing to remit them is probably the worst.

The internal social system at Apple whose 'conservative' default behavior is to remove rather then remit.

An accounting firm was held liable as \n a responsible party because it had failed to remit a client’s trust fund \n taxes and paid creditors other than the Internal Revenue Service.

The logic here appears to be that since the employee is deemed to have paid the government on the day that an employee receives his or her paycheck, the employer is holding those funds in a trust for the government, to be remitted quarterly.

It's no accident that the author turns to the authority of feminists for perspectives on men -- despite that being so laughly outside the remit of feminism -- because the entire point, unstated but present, throughout the article is that women have 'got it right' and men should be more like women.

Remit definitions

noun

the topic that a person, committee, or piece of research is expected to deal with or has authority to deal with; "they set up a group with a remit to suggest ways for strengthening family life"

noun

(law) the act of remitting (especially the referral of a law case to another court)

See also: remission remitment

verb

send (money) in payment; "remit $25"

verb

hold back to a later time; "let's postpone the exam"

verb

release from (claims, debts, or taxes); "The taxes were remitted"

verb

refer (a matter or legal case) to another committee or authority or court for decision

See also: remand

verb

forgive; "God will remit their sins"

verb

make slack as by lessening tension or firmness

See also: slacken

verb

diminish or abate; "The pain finally remitted"