paid Definition
paid
verb
- 1. Past tense, past participle of pay1.
- To destroy any chances of success in it.
pay1
verb pays, paid, paying
- tr & intr
1. To give (money) to someone in exchange for goods, services, etc.
- Example: I paid him £10 for the books
2. To settle (a bill, debt, etc).
tr & intr
3. To give (wages or salary) to an employee.
tr & intr
4. To make a profit, or make something as profit.
- Example: businesses that don't pay
- Example: an investment that pays £500 per annum
5. To benefit; to be worthwhile.
- Example: It pays one to be polite
- Example: Dishonesty doesn't pay
6. To suffer a penalty on account of it; to be punished for it.
- Example: pay dearly for one's crimes
- Example: paid with his life
- Form: pay for something (also)
- Example: paid her a visit in hospital
- Example: paid him a compliment on his new haircut
- 1. Money given or received for work, etc; wages; salary.
- Thesaurus: income, salary, earnings, wages, stipend, allowance, fee, recompense, remuneration.
- Employed by them, especially for a secret or dishonest purpose.
- formal or old-fashioned
Said of a man: to court (a woman).
- To pay all of one's own debts and living expenses.
- To compensate adequately for initial outlay.
- colloq
To put an end to them; to deal effectively or finally with them.
- To bear the expense of something and therefore have control of it, ie call the tune (see under call).
- To pay a very high price.
- Example: paid through the nose for the coach tour
Phrasal Verb: pay someone back
- To revenge oneself on them.
- To return (money owed).
- To pay (eg a first instalment) in cash immediately.
- To put (money, etc) into a bank account.
- To have profitable results.
- To make them redundant with a final payment.
- To finish paying (a debt, etc). See also pay-off.
- To spend or give (money), eg to pay bills, debts, etc.To release or slacken (a rope, etc) especially by passing it little by little through one's hands.
- To pay the full amount that is due, especially reluctantly. See also paid-up.
