requitals

plural of requital
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Example Sentences

Recent Examples of Synonyms for requitals
Noun
  • In 2022, a jury awarded Depp more than $10 million in damages, while Heard won one of her counterclaims and was awarded $2 million.
    Charlie Carballo, USA Today, 30 June 2026
  • Most kinds of lawsuit damages are taxable, including employment cases, property loss or damage, defamation, emotional distress, invasion of privacy, credit reporting and consumer cases, and many others.
    Robert W. Wood, Forbes.com, 29 June 2026
Noun
  • California’s richest residents would be able to spread the payments over five years.
    Iris Kwok, Los Angeles Times, 6 July 2026
  • The first wave of Social Security payments for July is scheduled to be distributed this week.
    Fernando Cervantes Jr, USA Today, 6 July 2026
Noun
  • Over the past year, countries rushed to secure piecemeal deals; some allowed panic to overtake them; very few coordinated their actions or retaliations.
    Mihir Sharma, Twin Cities, 26 Mar. 2026
  • Neither country can afford to return to the prior tariff rates during the heat of tit-for-tat retaliations, which freaked out Big Tech earlier this year.
    Ashley Belanger, ArsTechnica, 15 Sep. 2025
Noun
  • The sides also compromised on financial relief for Iran, which initially demanded at least $500 billion in reparations, one of the regional officials said.
    E. Eduardo Castillo, Chicago Tribune, 26 June 2026
  • Collective, which advocates for reparations, land returns for Native Americans, bonds for newborns and a universal basic income.
    Phaedra Trethan, USA Today, 22 June 2026
Noun
  • Just to cover the city’s various bond measures, the owner of a home with an assessed value of $1 million pays around $1,145 annually.
    Shomik Mukherjee, Mercury News, 3 June 2026
  • Even with premiums, co-pays and deductibles, the federal government cannot afford Medicare-for-some.
    Editorial Board, Washington Post, 26 May 2026
Noun
  • What starts as a petty territorial conflict mutates into a spiralling cycle of retributions, escalating from passive-aggressive jabs to acts of destruction and ruin.
    Udita Jhunjhunwala, Variety, 21 Nov. 2025
  • Surveys are important, too, so workers feel safe to speak up without any retributions.
    Vicki Salemi, Boston Herald, 27 Oct. 2025
Noun
  • This can help address strength imbalances and movement compensations that, over time, can lead to injury.
    Jenessa Connor, Health, 10 June 2026
  • Still, Fiedler shows convincingly enough that American writers’ attempts to adapt the seduction narrative to our concerns—to reimagine it so as to preserve our enduring sense of ourselves as innocents—explain our literature’s peculiar aversions and resultant compensations.
    Becca Rothfeld, New Yorker, 1 June 2026
Noun
  • For this calculation, the institutional research department compared UC graduates’ earnings to out-of-pocket costs for their degrees and the opportunity costs of forgone wages of high school graduates of the same age.
    Tarini Mehta, Sacbee.com, 2 July 2026
  • Anthropic gives serious attention to displacement, including the possibility of durable pressure on wages and employment, while the Vatican insists that work is tied to dignity, participation and citizenship.
    Paulo Carvão, Forbes.com, 1 July 2026
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Cite this Entry

“Requitals.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/requitals. Accessed 7 Jul. 2026.

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