Glossary entry

English term or phrase:

rate

English answer:

amount that you charge

Added to glossary by Michael Powers (PhD)
Feb 10, 2008 03:55
16 yrs ago
English term

rate

English Bus/Financial Business/Commerce (general)
"At such restaurants, meals run about $ 40 a day, or $ 200 for a work week. Multiply to find the yearly cost, then build this into your rates."

What sort of rate does "rate" mean here?
Change log

Feb 10, 2008 04:44: Beatriz Galiano (X) changed "Field" from "Art/Literary" to "Bus/Financial"

Feb 10, 2008 12:28: writeaway changed "Field (specific)" from "Linguistics" to "Business/Commerce (general)"

Feb 25, 2008 03:29: Michael Powers (PhD) Created KOG entry

Discussion

Andrew Levine Feb 10, 2008:
That all depends on who the "you" in "your" is! Who is this addressed to?

Responses

+4
2 mins
Selected

amount that you charge

To include this expense in addition to compensation

Mike :)
Peer comment(s):

agree Nelida Kreer : More context would hv been nice, but I would say u r right, Mike. Perhaps also "build this into your prices".
17 hrs
Thank you, Niki-K - I like your suggestion of " building it into one's prices" - Mike :)
agree Deborah Workman
21 hrs
Thank you, Deborah - Mike :)
agree ErichEko ⟹⭐
1 day 2 hrs
Thank you, Erich - Mike :)
agree orientalhorizon
2 days 30 mins
Thank you, oreintalhorizon - Mike :)
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Selected automatically based on peer agreement."
+1
2 mins

salary/wage

Meaning how much one should ask for when applying to such restaurants.
Peer comment(s):

agree V_Nedkov
15 hrs
Thank you, V.
Something went wrong...
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