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remuneration    音标拼音: [rɪmj,unɚ'eʃən]
n. 报酬

报酬

remuneration
n 1: something that remunerates; "wages were paid by check"; "he
wasted his pay on drink"; "they saved a quarter of all
their earnings" [synonym: {wage}, {pay}, {earnings},
{remuneration}, {salary}]
2: the act of paying for goods or services or to recompense for
losses; "adequate remuneration for his work"

Remuneration \Re*mu`ner*a"tion\ (-?"sh?n), n. [L. remuneratio:
cf. F. r['e]mun['e]ration.]
1. The act of remunerating.
[1913 Webster]

2. That which is given to remunerate; an equivalent given, as
for services, loss, or sufferings. --Shak.
[1913 Webster]

Syn: Reward; recompense; compensation; pay; payment;
repayment; satisfaction; requital.
[1913 Webster]

67 Moby Thesaurus words for "remuneration":
amends, atonement, base pay, blood money, compensation,
consideration, damages, dismissal wage, earnings, emolument,
escalator clause, escalator plan, financial remuneration,
gross income, guaranteed annual wage, guerdon, hire, honorarium,
income, indemnification, indemnity, living wage, meed,
minimum wage, net income, pay, pay and allowances, payment,
payroll, portal-to-portal pay, price, purchasing power, quittance,
real wages, recompense, redress, reimbursement, reparation,
repayment, requital, requitement, restitution, retribution, return,
reward, salary, salvage, satisfaction, severance pay,
sliding scale, smart money, solatium, stipend, take-home,
take-home pay, taxable income, total compensation, wage,
wage control, wage freeze, wage reduction, wage rollback,
wage scale, wages, wages after deductions, wages after taxes,
wergild


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  • Renumeration vs Remuneration (reimbursed financially), which is correct?
    Remuneration is much more commonly used than renumeration (https: goo gl 44GQRa) Remuneration is first cited c 1400, comes from Middle French (remuneracion) and Latin (remūnerātiō), and means reward, recompense; (now usually) money paid for work or a service; payment, pay
  • single word requests - corollarily or equivalent? - English Language . . .
    Your answer made me curious about other words that are hard to pronounce, so I did a quick search and got some interesting results Here's a few of them: Entrepreneurship, Remuneration, Deterioration, Diphtheria, Cavalry, Barbiturate, Arctic, Prerogative
  • When does the word months get an apostrophe? [duplicate]
    Twelve months' remuneration is a noun phrase - its head is the noun remuneration and so the modifier can be a possessive Syntactically, it doesn't have to be a possessive, but it can be This is an area where the language is in flux Traditionally it is regarded as a possessive
  • Differences between Verb + to be + adjective and Verb + adjective
    The first one that comes to mind is To be, or not to be, of course The to is required because infinitives starting sentences require a complementizer to mark subordination (remove it and see what happens) The be is required because it's the main verb and has an actual meaning -- in this case, human life and experience of existence
  • meaning - we are in receipt of something - English Language Usage . . .
    To be "in receipt of" something is, I believe, old, and to us rather stilted, business English phrasing, the sort of language used by shopkeepers in the early 19th century, meaning merely "received" Such language remained in common use until the mid 20th century, and is occasionally still found Another example is " [I am in receipt of] your favor of the 18th ult ", meaning "I received the
  • differences - would like you to vs. please - English Language . . .
    I came up with the following two constructions: In addition, I will not be receiving my stipend while working So please consider my remuneration package carefully In addition, I will not be receiving my stipend while working So I would like you to consider my remuneration package carefully Any additional improvements are welcome
  • The meaning of pro - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Pro is short for professional, which generally implies remuneration, as opposed to amateur which does not But professional has come to also mean expert or advanced, as opposed to novice or newbie In other words, it does not necessarily mean someone who carries out an activity for remuneration (A prostitute is a professional (in the first sense, of receiving remuneration) But most
  • word choice - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The Department of Public Health had allotted special allowances for all subjects who (m) the Supervising Teacher considered deserving of compensatory remuneration for their time and effort spent participating in this project
  • grammar - I attach, I am attaching, or I have attached - English . . .
    "I attach" seems an awkward construction Many people (especially Indians) use "I am attaching" but I think the best option is "I have attached" because you have already attached it! Both 'mark-up' and 'marked up version' mean the same though mark-up is simpler and 'marked up version' is more formal In any case, even work related emails offer great flexibility of language, and the main
  • What is a word for someone who abuses their workers?
    This is different from what was asked The workers could easily be abused and scorned, and yet adequately paid or even well-paid I think the question was asking about how they were treated, apart from remuneration Erwin Bolwidt's comment answer of "abusive manager" or "abusive boss" is much better, in my opinion





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