salary 的定义
plural sal·a·ries.
- a fixed compensation periodically paid to a person for regular work or services.
salary 近义词
money paid for work done
更多salary例句
- Bannon is the group’s president and is described as working 80 hours a week for the group with no salary.
- The company cut its dividend for the second quarter by 38 percent, suspended more than $1 billion of development projects and temporarily reduced staff salaries by as much as 30 percent.
- Because all of our big sports, the average salaries are in the millions of dollars.
- The researchers surmised that the company would have to raise salaries by a third in order to compete with simple messaging of social impact.
- Under the scheme, the UK government pays workers up to 80% of their salary for a limited period of time, allowing companies to retain them without paying them—though companies were allowed to top up the government money.
- They will still receive a salary if something is to happen to Ziad, but she is trying to make sure she saves as much as possible.
- Yes, lawyers bill by the hour but are paid an annual salary—plus bonuses.
- Clinkscales is still a cop, and made more than $100,000 in salary and overtime last year.
- Still, he admitted—without disclosing his salary—that he wondered whether the paychecks were too good to last.
- He looks like a man of the woods, but works at The Nerdery, programming for a healthy salary and benefits.
- With this object in view, he has been continually paid his salary from the judicial expenses.
- Sir Peter Edlin, it seems, has been doing treble the amount of work for a two-third's salary.
- Thimbletoes doesn't fancy that, you know, because the Prime Minister has all the honey he wants, by way of a salary.
- Your Majesty assigns him no salary, for it seems to be your intention to have him attend to that duty with his salary as fiscal.
- Twenty dollars a month is the salary, and school keeps for six months, so I shall earn the large sum of $120 a year.