Glossary entry (derived from question below)
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?
What sort of rate does "rate" mean here?
Responses
4 +4 | amount that you charge | Michael Powers (PhD) |
4 +1 | salary/wage | Mark Berelekhis |
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
Responses
+4
2 mins
Selected
amount that you charge
To include this expense in addition to compensation
Mike :)
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 :)
|
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.
Discussion