REMUNERATE: "to pay an equivalent to for any service, loss, or expense"


"Remunerate" means to pay someone for their work or services, typically with money. It's the act of compensating or rewarding someone for their efforts.

The word "remunerate" has its roots in Latin, coming from the word "remunerari," which means "to reward" or "to compensate."

Here are five sample sentences using "remunerate":

  1. The company promised to remunerate its employees with bonuses for exceeding their sales targets.

  2. It's essential to remunerate artists fairly for their creations to support the thriving of creative industries.

  3. The organization aims to remunerate volunteers by offering them stipends to cover their expenses.

  4. A fair wage is crucial to remunerate workers adequately for their contributions to society.

5. The contract stipulates that the consulting firm will remunerate their services based on project milestones.



From Dictionary.com

Word of the Day for Saturday, March 22, 2008

remunerate \rih-MYOO-nuh-rate\, transitive verb:

1. To pay an equivalent to for any service, loss, or expense; to recompense.

2. To compensate for; to make payment for.

Not to suggest that our bosses remunerate
us for our high moral standards, but creative bureaucrats at Mesa City
Hall have invented a new fund from tax revenue that sets up a $20,000
account for each virtuous City Council member.
-- Art Thomason, "Mesa Puts Quite a Price on Discretion", Arizona Republic, May 18, 2000
The plaintiff could therefore only recover payment for her
services if there was evidence of an implied or express contract by the
business of which he was a partner (or by the plaintiff personally) to remunerate her for the work which she had done.
-- Kate O'Hanlon, "No damages for wife's gratuitous work", Independent, May 27, 1999
[The firm] wanted to meet long-term investment requirements out of retained profits and also to be able to properly remunerate all the staff and give them a share of the profits.
-- Roger Trapp, "Legal firms 'go offshore' to avoid litigation", Independent, May 2, 1996

Remunerate comes from Latin remunerari, "to reward," from re-, "back, again" + munerari, "to give, to present," from munus, "a gift."


Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for remunerate

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