1/peɪ/Show Spelled[pey]Show IPAverb, paid or (Obsoleteexcept for defs. 12, 24c) payed;pay·ing;noun, adjective
verb (used with object)
1.
to settle (a debt, obligation, etc.), as by transferring money or goods, or by doing something: Please pay your bill.
2.
to give over (a certain amount of money) in exchange for something: He paid twenty dollars for the shirt.
3.
to transfer money as compensation or recompense for work done or services rendered; to satisfy the claims of (a person, organization, etc.), as by giving money due: He paid me for my work.
to pay (part of the total price) at the time of purchase, with the promise to pay the balance in installments: On this plan you pay only ten percent down.
b.
to pay off or back; amortize: The company's debt is being paid down rapidly.
28.
pay for, to suffer or be punished for: to pay for one's sins.
29.
pay off,
a.
to pay (someone) everything that is due that person, especially to do so and discharge from one's employ.
b.
to pay (a debt) in full.
c.
Informal. to bribe.
d.
to retaliate upon or punish.
e.
Nautical. to fall off to leeward.
f.
to result in success or failure: The risk paid off handsomely.
30.
pay out,
a.
to distribute (money, wages, etc.); disburse.
b.
to get revenge upon for an injury; punish.
c.
to let out (a rope) by slackening.
31.
pay up,
a.
to pay fully.
b.
to pay on demand: The gangsters used threats of violence to force the shopkeepers to pay up.
Idioms
32.
pay as you go,
a.
to pay for (goods, services, etc.) at the time of purchase, as opposed to buying on credit.
b.
to spend no more than income permits; keep out of debt.
c.
to pay income tax by regular deductions from one's salary or wages.
33.
pay back,
a.
to repay or return: to pay back a loan.
b.
to retaliate against or punish: She paid us back by refusing the invitation.
c.
to requite.
34.
pay one's/its way,
a.
to pay one's portion of shared expenses.
b.
to yield a return on one's investment sufficient to repay one's expenses: It will take time for the restaurant to begin paying its way.
Origin: 1150–1200; Middle English payen < Old French paier < Medieval Latin pācāre to satisfy, settle (a debt), Latin: to pacify (by force of arms). See peace
Synonyms 1. discharge, liquidate. 3. reward, reimburse, indemnify. 19. remuneration, emolument, fee, honorarium, income, allowance. Pay,wage or wages,salary,stipend are terms for amounts of money or equivalent benefits, usually given at a regular rate or at regular intervals, in return for services. Pay is the general term: His pay went up every year. Wage usually designates the pay given at an hourly, daily, or weekly rate, often for manual or semiskilled work; wages usually means the cumulative amount paid at regular intervals for such work: an hourly wage; weekly wages. Salary designates a fixed, periodic payment for regular work or services, usually computed on a monthly or yearly basis: an annual salary paid in twelve equal monthly installments. Stipend designates a periodic payment, either as a professional salary or, more commonly, as a salary in return for special services or as a grant in support of creative or scholarly work: an annual stipend for work as a consultant; a stipend to cover living expenses.