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  1. Dictionary
    paid
    /peɪd/

    verb

    • 1. past and past participle of pay

    adjective

    • 1. (of work or leave) for or during which one receives pay: "five weeks paid holiday a year"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 52. Paid or payed is the past tense of pay depending on the sense of pay. The first sense is the usual one of giving someone money while the second sense is to seal (the deck or seams of a wooden ship) with pitch or tar to prevent leakage. Per the OED, the only two senses that allow payed are: “13.

  3. Aug 16, 2011 · Contract ambiguity is generally resolved by courts in favor of the party that did not write the contract. So the statement at 21:04 on August 16 2011, "You need to deliver this product within 2 days (until August 18, 2011) to meet your deadline and get paid." gives a little over two full days to fulfill the contract. –

  4. Jul 26, 2023 · “Put paid to” is a metaphor that depends on knowing about marking a bill as PAID by grabbing a rubber stamp, inking it (unless it has its own ink supply), and stamping the bill, usually in red. A speaker may recognize the meaning of the phrase without that knowledge, but as the era of paper bills and inked stamps fades, the meaning depends on vocabulary knowledge rather than metaphor.

  5. Mar 12, 2019 · Pay out would not be part of a purchace on installment; pay out is what a company does to distribute funds. Payment - the individual amounts paid toward the total owed. Payoff - the final payment, or the amount that if paid now would be the full amount owed. (Payoff can be one word as a noun in this jargon, but as a verb it is “pay off”.

  6. The credit might be change, or it might be entered onto the books of the business as an A/P item due to that customer in the future. This is a case when cash tendered is greater than cash paid. Note that cash tendered minus cash paid equals change returned to the customer or the sum entered into the books as A/P. Scenario 3

  7. 4. I am confused on how to properly describe an all expense paid vacation. Is it an all expenses paid vacation or an all expense paid vacation, and are there any hyphens between all, expense or expenses, and paid? I ask because it seems to be all over the place on google search. By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our and ...

  8. Nov 26, 2014 · When the word refers to money paid by a person who inflicts harm, damage or loss to another person, compensation fits better. compensation - "money, given or received as payment or reparation, as for a service or loss" The Free Dictionary "The victim received $10,000 in compensation."

  9. May 30, 2019 · There is an invoice in a computer system. It has the "total sum" and the "paid sum" associated with it. How do you call "what remains yet to be paid" on this one invoice?

  10. It depends. Quotes from Times’s stylebook (explained here): Often "or not" is redundant after whether, but not always. The phrase may ordinarily be omitted in these cases: • When the whether clause is the object of a verb: She wonders whether the teacher will attend. (The clause is the object of wonders.)

  11. Accumulative means having the characteristic of tending to accumulate. Cumulative means having built up or accumulated over time. E.g. something has a cumulative effect, or is a cumulative result of something. It is more specific in meaning than 'accumulative', in that it