Horrible! And the opacity of that language again vindicates my opinion on the
misplacement of “only”. In common usage now people write or say it before the
verb of a clause instead of before the clause that it qualifies . . . and it is
misleading. But there are 2 sentences that don’t really make sense.
But then that’s the job of the tax man: to make rules that no one understands,
and to ensure than any explanation is not worthy of that term.
Chris
On 4 Jul 2014, at 13:22, Piers Hemy <piers@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Now try this one, see if you can work out what the questions which include
> the word "only" mean.
>
> http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/forms/p11dx.pdf
>
> Piers
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: olympus
> [mailto:olympus-bounces+piers.hemy=gmail.com@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
> ChrisB
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