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Beatles song with the lyric "There's one for you, nineteen for me"
Answer for the clue "Beatles song with the lyric "There's one for you, nineteen for me" ", 6 letters:
taxman
Alternative clues for the word taxman
- Volunteers mutant superhero to be one overseeing duty
- Beatles song with the line "There's one for you, nineteen for me"
- Someone who collects taxes for the government
- Song on the Beatles' "Revolver" album
- Classic Beatles song on the “Revolver” album
- Cross parent coming in to beat government official?
- George Harrison tune on the "Revolver" album
Word definitions for taxman in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. someone who collects taxes for the government [syn: tax collector , exciseman , collector of internal revenue , internal revenue agent ]
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A generic, usually derogatory term for a tax collector.
Usage examples of taxman.
Bother Me, Here Comes the Sun, I Me Mine, 398, 584 I Need You, I Want to Tell You, If I Needed Someone, Love You Too, Piggies, Something, Taxman, Think for Yourself, While My Guitar Gently Weeps, songs by John Lennon, How Do You Sleep?
Digest condensed books, the TV series, paperback contracts - even though, at the end, the taxman had got in amongst his earnings.
I heard was the barton got the money, all of it, and killed the taxman and his two guards.
I was a child, there were parts of Saldaea that had not seen a taxman in five generations.
It gives me a fine feeling of patriotism and the opportunity to make a telling political statement, while at the same time I can pocket seventy-five million pounds in lovely hard cash that the taxman will never see.
We take a duplicate of what they’re supposed to give the taxmen when they come next spring.
When the taxmen arrived in the spring, they would come armed with the truth, and the guilty parties would find themselves paying a stiff penalty.
We take a duplicate of what they're supposed to give the taxmen when they come next spring.
And these people aren't just mixed-up berks and babbling bagladies: they are haunted tinnitic taxmen, bug-eyed barristers and smart-bombed bureaucrats.
As long as he kept up the payments, they were unlikely to go squealing to the taxmen, who were their only contact with the central government.