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STRUCTURED PAY .COM

STRUCTURED PAY .COM for sale. Premium Domain.

struc·tured  (strŭk′chərd)

adj.

1.

a. Having a well-defined structure or organization; highly organized: a structured environment.
b. Arranged in a definite pattern.
2. Psychology Having a limited number of correct or nearly correct answers. Used of a test.
pay 1  (pā)

v. paid (pād), pay·ingpays
v.tr.

1. To give money to in return for goods or services rendered: pay the cashier.
2. To give (money) in exchange for goods or services: paid four dollars for a hamburger; paid an hourly wage.
3. To discharge or settle (a debt or obligation): paying taxes; paid the bill.
4.

a. To give recompense for; requite: a kindness that cannot be paid back.
b. To give recompense to; reward or punish: I’ll pay him back for his insults.
5. To bear (a cost or penalty, for example) in recompense: She paid the price for her unpopular opinions.
6. To yield as a return: a savings plan that paid six percent interest.
7. To afford an advantage to; profit: It paid us to be generous.
8. To give or bestow: paying compliments; paying attention.
9. To make (a visit or call).
10. Past tense and past participle paid or payed (pād) To let out (a line or cable) by slackening.
v.intr.

1. To give money in exchange for goods or services.
2. To discharge a debt or obligation.
3. To bear a cost or penalty in recompense: You’ll pay for this mischief!
4. To be profitable or worthwhile: It doesn’t pay to get angry.
adj.

1. Of, relating to, giving, or receiving payments.
2. Requiring payment to use or operate: a pay toilet.
3. Yielding valuable metal in mining: a pay streak.
n.

1. The act of paying or state of being paid.
2. Money given in return for work done; salary; wages.
3.

a. Recompense or reward: Your thanks are pay enough.
b. Retribution or punishment.
4. Paid employment: the workers in our pay.
5. A person considered with regard to his or her credit or reliability in discharging debts.

Phrasal Verbs:

pay off

1. To pay the full amount on (a debt).
2. To effect profit: a bet that paid off poorly.
3. To get revenge for or on; requite.
4. To pay the wages due to (an employee) upon discharge.
5. Informal To bribe.
6. Nautical To turn or cause to turn (a vessel) to leeward.
pay out

1. To give (money) out; spend.
2. To let out (a line or rope) by slackening.
pay up

To give over the full monetary amount demanded.

Idioms:

pay (one’s) dues

To earn a given right or position through hard work, long-term experience, or suffering: She paid her dues in small-town theaters before being cast in a Broadway play.
pay (one’s) way

To contribute one’s own share; pay for oneself.
pay the piper

To bear the consequences of something.
pay through the nose Informal

To pay excessively.

[Middle English paien, from Old French paiier, from Late Latin pācāreto appease, from Latin, to pacify, subdue, from pāx, pāc-peace; see pag- in Indo-European roots.]
Word History: Given the unpeaceful feelings one often has in paying bills or income taxes, it is difficult to believe that the word pay ultimately derives from the Latin word pāx,“peace.” However, it is not the peace of the one who pays that is involved in this development of meaning. From pāx, meaning “peace” and also “a settlement of hostilities,” was derived the word pācāre, “to impose a settlement on peoples or territories.” In Late Latin pācāre was extended in sense to mean “to appease.” The Old French word paiierthat developed from Latin pācāre came to have the specific application “to pacify or satisfy a creditor,” a sense that came into Middle English along with the word paien (first recorded around the beginning of the 13th century), the ancestor of our word pay.

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