Toll in a sentence as a noun

This takes a massive psychological toll even as you're get back up to put on that brave face.

It's the same awfulness which results in speed traps, permanent toll roads, and red light or speeding cameras.

Now imagine there is a toll gate on I15 outside San Bernadino that charges you $100M to use the road between LA and Barstow.

As she was driving back home, she realized she didn't have any money for the toll to cross over the bridge - which should not have been the case.

How is this a proof that fragmentation is causing a "shocking toll"?For the curious, I decompiled this "Temple Run" app.

Long-distance toll voice really didn't begin to sound good until digital trunking came along.

Toll in a sentence as a verb

But since it's often intermixed, sometimes explicitly with toll-free bridging, boy are people going to be confused someday!

That'd be like a shopping mall's dealing with its Black-Friday traffic jams by setting up toll booths to block the adjoining public highways and charging vehicles to go through.

In summary:NetFlix argument: Comcast is using its bully position to extra a toll from service providers and service subscribers.

At some point, after basic needs are met, every working person is forced to answer the following question with respect to the toll work takes on his or her family: is it worth it?It takes courage to say "no" and make a clean cut. Kudos to this gentleman for doing what his family needs him to do.

You wind up with those who have not innovated a day in their lives making debilitating demands on those engaged in brilliant innovation in furtherance of a cynical shake-down process that amounts to a toll on innovation with no offsetting benefits.

Toll definitions

noun

a fee levied for the use of roads or bridges (used for maintenance)

noun

value measured by what must be given or done or undergone to obtain something; "the cost in human life was enormous"; "the price of success is hard work"; "what price glory?"

See also: price cost

noun

the sound of a bell being struck; "saved by the bell"; "she heard the distant toll of church bells"

See also: bell

verb

ring slowly; "For whom the bell tolls"

verb

charge a fee for using; "Toll the bridges into New York City"