tithe|tithes in English
noun
[taɪð]
tenth part; tenth part of one's income paid as a tax for the support of religious institutions
Use "tithe|tithes" in a sentence
1. Or “tithes.”
2. Should You Tithe?
3. Willingly pay a full tithe.
4. Both Jacob and Abraham voluntarily offered tithes.
5. I haven't heard a tithe of it.
6. A Tithe Is a Tenth Part
7. Despite his hardship, Genival gave the tithe conscientiously.
8. The Ordnance Survey Memoirs for County Antrim in the 1830s are full of complaints about the Cantankerousness of Presbyterians who still refused to pay tithes or small dues in the years leading up to tithe commutation in 1838
9. For many churches, the answer is the tithe.
10. I cannot remember a tithe of it.
11. * See also Alms, Almsgiving; Riches; Tithes, Tithing; Worldliness
12. I don't know a tithe of it.
13. We Are Blessed When We Give Tithes and Offerings
14. We want to have prosperity without paying our tithes.
15. The payment of tithes was adopted from the Old Law . . .
16. There are no dues or tithes that have to be paid.
17. The Lord promises to bless us as we faithfully pay our tithes and offerings.
18. The Law was abolished, including the command to present specific material offerings and tithes.
19. Paying a full and honest tithe leads us to the temple.
20. He understood, and he could become a full-tithe payer.
21. They have truly brought the whole tithe into the storehouse.
22. Genival discovered that the Lord’s work does not depend on tithes.
23. How have Jehovah’s people been blessed for bringing in their whole tithe?
24. 14 Clearly, for Christians the tithe symbolizes, or represents, something.
25. A . The Tithe is compulsory while the offering is voluntary.