When a fine is given out, it is directly to the driver or owner. And by NASCAR rules whoever the fine is to must pay the fine.
Yes, fine can be used as an adjective. Examples: a fine writer, fine hair. Fine can also be used as verb and a noun. Verb: The police officer fined the driver for speeding. Noun: Please pay the fine on time.
If a British driver is caught speeding on camera in France, nothing or nearly nothing happens. If the same driver is stopped by the police for speeding, he will be fined on the spot (a fine of 90
Fined is a verb. It's the past tense of fine.
A small bit of info, A fine levied by Nascar, in the thousands, Mcclaren was fined 100 million.Answer Formula one has less sponsors but more money, nascar has more sponsor less money. Granted formula one has great sponsors and more of an international following but the competition is more about the driver than people think. As far as team budgets go, it's definetly f1. the big teams have budgets from 100- 250 MILLION. with 10 teams, that's a ridiculous amount of money. I would disagree and say that f1 also has a far bigger following. sure, nascar is big in the us, but f1 is everywhere. it is the third most watched sporting event in the world, and nascar is further down the list. F1 has far more money. No question.
They were fined and imprisoned.
One homonym for "find" is "fined," which is the past tense of "fine" meaning to issue a monetary penalty for an offense.
Fined is a verb. It's the past tense of fine.
The police did not fine her, the Montgomery City court fined her $10 plus court costs of $4 for a total assessed of $14.
The past participle is fined.
The past participle is fined.
You were either sent out of the goldfields or you were fined a certain amount of money. You could also be suspended from the goldfields.