yearlyyear‧ly /ˈjɪəli, ˈjɜː- $ ˈjɪrli/ ●○○ adjective - Investments are reviewed yearly.
- Subscribers receive yearly updates on our new services.
- How efficient the place was - a model clearing house for death, turning out its yearly quota of corpses.
- In Hampshire, schools were asked to select one of four yearly phases for the introduction of the scheme.
- Standardized testing for all students on a yearly basis, with test scores to be reported in the media.
- That amounts to a total yearly income of £3,179.80.
- This concession cost the order ten percent of its yearly income.
► three-yearly/five-yearly etc (=every three years etc) a checkup at five-yearly intervals NOUN► basis· Students are allocated accommodation on a yearly basis, though payment is by termly instalments.· Standardized testing for all students on a yearly basis, with test scores to be reported in the media.· Some of these are updated on a quarterly rather than a yearly basis.
► income· That amounts to a total yearly income of £3,179.80.· Today the mean yearly income of families of students receiving financial aid, she believes, is approximately $ 36, 000.· It is £2,265 for the full grant and £420 for the student loan - in total a yearly income of just £2,685.· Money holdings usually exceed hourly but not yearly income. 3.· This concession cost the order ten percent of its yearly income.· The average monthly benefit in 1993 was $ 377, a yearly income of $ 4, 524.· The Daughery family made their meager yearly income following the harvest.
► salary· You should take some time off, even if your yearly salary is what Bill Gates earns in a nanosecond.
nounyearadjectiveyearlyadverbyearly