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- verbpay (verb) · pays (third person present) · paid (past tense) · paid (past participle) · paying (present participle)
- give (someone) money that is due for work done, goods received, or a debt incurred:"he paid the locals to pick his coffee beans" · "I'll pay for your ticket"
- give (a sum of money) in exchange for goods or work done or in discharge of a debt:"he paid $1,000 to have it built in 1977" · "you will have paid out more in premiums that you received from claims" · "a museum paid him a four-figure sum for it"
- hand over or transfer the amount due of (a debt, wages, etc.) to someone:"I always prefer to pay all my bills on time" · "bonuses were paid to savers whose policies completed their full term"
- (of work, an investment, etc.) yield or provide someone with (a specified sum of money):"jobs that pay $5 or $6 an hour"
- (of a business or undertaking, or an attitude) be profitable or advantageous to someone:"crime doesn't pay" · "it pays to choose varieties carefully"
- suffer a loss or other misfortune as a consequence of an action:"they paid for his impatience" · "the destroyer responsible for these atrocities would have to pay with his life"
- give what is due or deserved to (someone); reward or punish:"“I'll pay you for that,” he snarled"
- give or bestow (attention, respect, or a compliment) on (someone):"no one paid them any attention"
- make (a visit or call) to (someone):"she has been prevailed upon to pay us a visit"
nounpay (noun)- the money paid to someone for regular work:"those working on contract may receive higher rates of pay" · "showing up and collecting your pay"
OriginMiddle English (in the sense ‘pacify’): from Old French paie (noun), payer (verb), from Latin pacare ‘appease’, from pax, pac- ‘peace’. The notion of ‘payment’ arose from the sense of ‘pacifying’ a creditor.verbnauticalpay (verb) · pays (third person present) · payed (past tense) · payed (past participle) · paying (present participle)- seal (the deck or hull seams of a wooden ship) with pitch or tar to prevent leakage:"an open groove between the planks had to be payed by running in hot pitch from a special ladle"
Originearly 17th century: from Old Northern French peier, from Latin picare, from pix, pic- ‘pitch’.Similar and Opposite Wordsverb- give (someone) money that is due for work done, goods received, or a debt incurred:
- give (a sum of money) in exchange for goods or work done or in discharge of a debt:
- hand over or transfer the amount due of (a debt, wages, etc.) to someone:
- (of a business or undertaking, or an attitude) be profitable or advantageous to someone:
- suffer a loss or other misfortune as a consequence of an action:
- give or bestow (attention, respect, or a compliment) on (someone):
noun- the money paid to someone for regular work:
Bokep
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