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Wage Weekly Weɪdʒ Week Low Cuts Work Extra

Word wage
WordType (noun)
Phonetic BrE / weɪdʒ / NAmE / weɪdʒ /
Example
  • wages of £200 a week
  • a weekly wage of £200
  • wage cuts
  • a wage increase of 3%
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Content

wage

(noun)BrE / weɪdʒ / NAmE / weɪdʒ /
  1. a regular amount of money that you earn, usually every week, for work or services
    • wages of £200 a week
    • a weekly wage of £200
    • wage cuts
    • a wage increase of 3%
    • a wage rise of 3%
    • wage demands/claims/settlements
    • Wages are paid on Fridays.
    • There are extra benefits for people on low wages.
    • Tax and insurance are deducted from your wages.
    • The staff have agreed to a voluntary wage freeze (= a situation in which wages are not increased for a time).
    • people on low incomes
    • a weekly wage of £200
    • The job offers good rates of pay.
    • a rise in average earnings for factory workers

    Extra Examples

    • Full employment pushed up wages.
    • He busked to supplement his meagre wages.
    • He got his first wage packet at fourteen years old.
    • He made a good wage as a trader.
    • How can you live on such a low wage?
    • If money wages remain constant and price levels rise, real wages fall.
    • Markets set the wages.
    • Real wages fell last year, when inflation is taken into account.
    • Semi-skilled tradesmen began to demand higher wages.
    • She earns a good wage at the factory.
    • Staff shortages have put an upward pressure on wages.
    • The Government this week raised the national minimum wage.
    • The government promised greater tax cuts in return for continued wage restraints.
    • The prevailing wage is generally determined by local union rates.
    • The store argues that it offers competitive wages.
    • The union submitted a wage claim for a 9% rise.
    • They both work minimum-wage jobs.
    • They docked his wages for arriving at work two hours late.
    • Women’s wages were lower than men’s.
    • a basic wage of £100 a week plus tips
    • my life as a corporate wage slave
    • the wage gap between men and women
    • to receive reimbursement for lost wages
    • wage differentials between large and small companies
    • workers fighting for a living wage
    • He gets a weekly wage of £300.
    • He receives weekly wages of £300.
    • She earns £120 a week, which is nothing like a living wage.
    • The staff have agreed to a voluntary wage freeze.
    • There are extra benefits for people on low wages.
    • a minimum wage

    Word Origin

    • Middle English: from Anglo-Norman French and Old Northern French, of Germanic origin; related to wed.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

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