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postage

/poh-stij/US // ˈpoʊ stɪdʒ //UK // (ˈpəʊstɪdʒ) //

邮费,邮资,邮政,邮递

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the charge for the conveyance of a letter or other matter sent by mail, usually prepaid by means of a stamp or stamps.

Examples

  • She has passed legislation improving young people’s access to the vote, eliminated postage fees on mail ballots and many others.

  • E-delivered ballots require voters to provide their own envelope and affix postage.

  • In a statement, the department listed several other steps it has taken beyond the minimum required by law to increase access, including providing prepaid postage for returning mail ballots.

  • Of the five, Colorado and Utah ask voters to pay postage to mail their votes.

  • If not, contact your local post office and ask what its policy is on ballot postage.

  • “Honoring predator Harvey Milk on a U.S. postage stamp is disturbing to say the least,” reads the press release.

  • Bob Larson was raised in McCook, Nebraska, a postage-stamp town of around 7,000 people and 23 churches.

  • She was relentless in her efforts to have my father honored with a United States postage stamp.

  • There is no limit on the amount of mail one can send a voter, and candidates do not get a special discount on postage.

  • Then Harris walked onto the postage stamp-sized stage, flashed that beauty queen smile and urged her crowd to hunker down.

  • At that time, the postage on letters from that region was very high, sometimes as much as fifty or sixty cents, or even a dollar.

  • The stamps, in remote districts, would frequently require more in postage to obtain than the value of the tax.

  • The contract becomes complete when the policy is put in the mail, postage prepaid, for delivery in due course to the insured.

  • On the upper right hand corner of your envelope, put your postage-stamp.

  • If the enquiry refers to matters interesting only to yourself, enclose a postage-stamp for the reply.