schedule
1. The part of legislation that is placed at the end of a UK Act of Parliament and contains subsidiary matter to the main sections of the Act.
2. One of several schedules of income tax forming part of the original income-tax legislation, now used to classify various sources of income for tax purposes. Some of the schedules are further subdivided into cases. The broad classification is: Schedule A, rents from property in the UK; Schedule B, income from commercial woodlands; Schedule C, interest paid by public bodies; Schedule D, Case 1, profits from trade; Case II, profits from professions or vocations; Case III, interest not otherwise taxed; Case IV, income from securities outside the UK; Case V, income from possessions outside the UK; Case VI, other annual profits and gains; Schedule E, Cases I, II, and III, emoluments of offices or employments (the cases depending on the residential status of the taxpayer); Schedule F, dividends paid by UK companies.
3. Working papers submitted with tax returns or tax computations.
4. Any scale of rates.
5. A plan for undertaking some enterprise, especially one that details the timing of events.

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