domicile
domicile — noun
- domicilesingular
- domicilesplural
1. the building, house, or area where someone regularly lives and considers their h
the building, house, or area where someone regularly lives and considers their home
After years of renting, Tomás finally bought a permanent domicile near the city park.
domicile + in [place] / permanent domicile
The postal service sends mail to your current domicile, even a temporary address.
Talia's main domicile is in Lisbon, though she keeps a flat in Madrid for work.
The census form asked for each person's usual domicile on a specific date.
Hugo keeps his official domicile in São Paulo, even while studying abroad in Berlin.
文法句型
domicile + in [place]
用法筆記
More formal than 'home' or 'house'. Used mainly in official documents, forms, and formal writing. In everyday conversation, native speakers prefer 'home' or 'place'.
常見錯誤
2. a person's official permanent home, as recognized by law for matters such as pay
a person's official permanent home, as recognized by law for matters such as paying tax, voting, or receiving inheritance
For tax purposes, Hugo declared his domicile as Singapore rather than the United Kingdom.
domicile as legal concept for tax
In the eyes of the law, a person can only have one domicile at a time.
Ravindra's domicile of origin is India, but he has lived in Canada for twenty years.
Eitan's domicile stays in Tel Aviv, though he works abroad most of the year.
The judge had to determine the deceased person's domicile at the time of death.
- legal residence
similar in meaning but less technical; used in immigration and tax forms
- permanent home
descriptive phrase that avoids legal terminology
- temporary address
a place you stay briefly, not your legal home
文法句型
domicile + of + noun
domicile + in [place]
用法筆記
In law, 'domicile' is distinct from 'residence': a person can have several residences (holiday homes, work apartments) but only one domicile at a time. The concept differs across legal systems, but generally your domicile is the country you treat as your permanent home and intend to return to.
常見錯誤
3. the country or city that a company is officially registered in, which determines
the country or city that a company is officially registered in, which determines its legal responsibilities for paying tax
The company moved its corporate domicile from Ireland to the Netherlands for better tax rules.
corporate domicile for tax purposes
Investors often check a firm's domicile to understand which regulations apply to its operations.
A business domicile determines the legal system under which the company must settle disputes.
Tunde's consulting firm chose a domicile in Estonia for its digital-friendly business laws.
- registered office
the official address of a company, filed with the local authorities
- place of incorporation
the country or state where a company is legally formed
- tax domicile
emphasises the tax implications of a company's registered location
文法句型
corporate domicile
domicile + of + company
用法筆記
This sense is almost entirely restricted to legal and financial contexts. In business English, 'country of incorporation' or 'registered office' are more commonly used alternatives.
常見錯誤
domicile — verb
- domicilepresent simple I / you / we / they
- domiciles3rd person singular
- domiciling-ing form
- domiciledpast simple
1. to establish your legal, permanent residence in a specified country, state, or c
to establish your legal, permanent residence in a specified country, state, or city
The corporation is domiciled in Delaware, though its headquarters are in New York.
passive: be domiciled in [place]
After retiring, Jin and Layla chose to be domiciled in a small Portuguese coastal town.
Under current immigration law, Brooke is considered domiciled in the country where her immediate family resides.
The artist is domiciled in Mexico City but travels often for exhibitions abroad.
文法句型
be domiciled in [place]
domicile + in [place]
用法筆記
The active form — e.g. 'She domiciled in France' — is extremely rare outside legal writing. Almost all usage is passive: 'be domiciled in [place]'. The verb carries the same legal weight as noun sense 2.