[ UK /dˈɒmɪsˌa‍ɪl/ ]
NOUN
  1. (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?
  2. housing that someone is living in
    they raise money to provide homes for the homeless
    he built a modest dwelling near the pond
VERB
  1. make one's home in a particular place or community
    may parents reside in Florida
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How To Use domicile In A Sentence

  • In other words, a person cannot be domiciled in a federation or confederacy.
  • X and Y are domiciled, resident and ordinarily resident in the United Kingdom.
  • They were domiciled abroad for tax purposes.
  • To prepare for the listing, it was created as a holding company for the assets and its domicile moved to Britain.
  • We all know Cyprus is a favourite domicile for businesses controlled by Russian oligarchs. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is possible to acquire a new domicile of choice, if you have left Britain permanently. Times, Sunday Times
  • Individuals acquire a domicile of origin at birth and this is normally the domicile of the father. Times, Sunday Times
  • That the prison was built for him also, which he used to call the domicile of the Roman commons. The History of Rome, Books 01 to 08
  • The Defendant is a German company, domiciled in Germany which manufactures and supplies liner paper for gypsum plasterboard.
  • This mental domicile was furnished with a potpourri of notions derived directly or indirectly from a long succession of philosophers, sages, and seers East and West.
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