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单词 unpaid
释义

Definition of unpaid in English:

unpaid

adjective ʌnˈpeɪdˌənˈpeɪd
  • 1(of a debt) not yet discharged by payment.

    unpaid bills
    Example sentencesExamples
    • At the heart of the dispute is the way First National treats borrowers who have come before the court because of unpaid debts.
    • With this infrastructure in place, what's to keep some group from saying that people with unpaid child support shouldn't be allowed to fly?
    • Bulgarian police are working on the theory that banker Emil Kyulev was murdered because of large unpaid debts.
    • Since then, Scottish Courage has continued in its efforts to keep the club in business and continued to supply the club - in spite of the unpaid debt.
    • She also admitted Mr Smith had once driven his car into the owner of the forecourt in Birkenshaw from where he ran a used car lot over an unpaid debt of £50,000.
    • So the fact that the medical debts were unpaid says little, because it may reflect strategic payment of debts prior to bankruptcy.
    • But the voters pronounced on those and believed the Government parties' promises which are now an unpaid debt.
    • These and other unpaid debts represent cash that should be sitting in the city's bank account.
    • Mr Straw said legal safeguards were in place to stop oil revenues being seized by another country for unpaid debts.
    • A close inspection of unpaid debts often reveals poor performance and unsolved issues.
    • The ship may ultimately have to be sold to cover the unpaid debts, as well as the crew's wages and costs for returning them home.
    • Police presently believe the murder was prompted either by unpaid debts or Khatibi's involvement with drug deals.
    • As a result, the march's legacy will probably include a flood of red ink, much the way other national events have ended in unpaid debt.
    • After weeks of investigating, the programme reveals the face of the thief who stole more than £15,000 and ran up hundreds of pounds in unpaid debts.
    • This spectacular fall left lenders and bondholders with unpaid debts of some $2 billion.
    • Their name and address plus the details of the account show along with a red card saying that their debt is unpaid.
    • They've been miscategorizing most identity theft all along - chalking it up to unpaid debt and writing it off.
    • The rules of bankruptcy allow such deals to discharge a bankrupt, no matter how large the unpaid debt.
    • May said council officials inquired about the unpaid debt shortly after Arthur's death but did not pursue it further until now, five years later.
    • Nothing is ever forgotten, and very few debts are left unpaid.
    Synonyms
    unsettled, outstanding, unresolved, unattended to, due, overdue, owing, owed, receivable, to be paid, payable, undischarged, in arrears, in the red
    North American delinquent, past due
  • 2(of work or a period of leave) undertaken without payment.

    unpaid labour in the home
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Each year there are around 4.4 million adults undertaking some 430 million hours of unpaid work.
    • The court will be able to insist they undertake unpaid work, drug or alcohol treatment or supervision while the sentence is on-going.
    • While the research found that most vacation work would be paid, more than 9,500 British students will opt for unpaid work experience.
    • But he chose the unfashionable business stream, and thence with unpaid work experience on the Times business desk.
    • I always found great sport in asking these questions when I was particularly grumpy after a period of unpaid overtime.
    • In addition, they also doubled the period of unpaid leave from its current level to eight.
    • Community penalties involve undertaking unpaid work amounting to seven million hours ordered each year.
    • Andersen did unpaid work which helped sharpen up Labour's policies, especially in the field of taxation.
    • Magistrates ordered him to do 240 hours of unpaid work within 12 months.
    • There are 6.5 million volunteers in Canada who contribute about one billion unpaid work hours each year.
    • ‘We use unpaid work in the community to intervene in the way offenders think and behave,’ said Mr Munday.
    • An estimated 109m people, about 56% of all American adults, volunteered last year for unpaid work.
    • They generally feel that their work isn't valued, and they are doing up to $20,000 per year in unpaid work.
    • Also, because she is expected to have unpaid work experience with a vet in her four weeks' holiday, she has no chance to pay anything off during the course.
    • We discussed the idea of my taking one day a week as unpaid leave for a finite period of time, or until new client work came in.
    • To the organisers of these events, it brings days and nights of unpaid work that is often taken for granted by those competing.
    • He was also ordered to undertake 150 hours unpaid work and to pay the £1,000 compensation to YorkBoat.
    • The teenager pleaded guilty and magistrates ordered him to perform 60 hours of unpaid work within 12 months.
    • The Time Use Survey shows that young women 18-24 years do much more unpaid work than their male counterparts.
    • This means that many migrants have to find unpaid work experience on their own.
    1. 2.1 (of a person) not receiving payment for work done.
      she spent most of her time fulfilling the role of unpaid housekeeper
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Thomas went to his grave regarding Eleanour as nothing more than a dear friend, useful as an unpaid secretary, the willing amanuensis who typed his manuscripts for him.
      • However, the massive demand for such nurses has led to a need for unpaid volunteers, mostly women on moderate incomes with children of their own.
      • But she starts in Biblical times, where the template is laid for the future treatment of wives as obedient, unpaid servants.
      • Surrey's unpaid labourer, Zaheer Khan, is announced fit for the Pakistan match on Sunday.
      • Carers of people with mental illness, unsung heroes or unpaid slaves?
      • He said carers, including tens of thousands of unpaid workers, are saving the exchequer €2 billion each year.
      • The man in the yellow shirt is an unpaid volunteer from the neighborhood, a member of the local crime policing forum, set up to the aid of police.
      • These are the unpaid heroes of grass-roots rugby, who get no fees for turning out to referee.
      • Typically, these are at least as starved for funds as the province, and the job at hand inevitably has to be picked up by groups of unpaid volunteers.
      • And one of the consenting parties, in addition to being just barely an adult, was an unpaid employee of the other.
      • When the second successor company was registered in 1997, he became a paid manager and unpaid director of that business.
      • The girls are treated like unpaid slaves or prisoners, except there is no crime and no fixed sentence.
      • The Seoul researchers collected 242 eggs from 16 unpaid volunteers.
      • However inept these postings were, they were unpaid volunteers expressing their unscripted enthusiasm.
      • Moreover, if local leaders receive a wage, they are resented by unpaid volunteers.
      • Dealler points out that some of the problems of BSE only came to light because independent, unpaid scientists drew them to the attention of parliament and the media.
      • According to the last census there are 15, 141 of these unsung and unpaid heroes in Merton with around 2,000 of them young carers.
      • The Times ought to be ashamed for its scheme to get unpaid members of the public to contribute to its website.
      • Under the new ‘regime’ Sophie and her brother Jason are just two of the club's board of unpaid directors.
      • His official title is director of football at Exeter City, his real title is unpaid director of football.
      Synonyms
      voluntary, volunteer, honorary, unrewarded, unremunerative, unsalaried, gratuitous, free
      Law pro bono (publico)
 
 

Definition of unpaid in US English:

unpaid

adjectiveˌənˈpeɪdˌənˈpād
  • 1(of a debt) not yet discharged by payment.

    unpaid bills
    Example sentencesExamples
    • She also admitted Mr Smith had once driven his car into the owner of the forecourt in Birkenshaw from where he ran a used car lot over an unpaid debt of £50,000.
    • As a result, the march's legacy will probably include a flood of red ink, much the way other national events have ended in unpaid debt.
    • This spectacular fall left lenders and bondholders with unpaid debts of some $2 billion.
    • After weeks of investigating, the programme reveals the face of the thief who stole more than £15,000 and ran up hundreds of pounds in unpaid debts.
    • Since then, Scottish Courage has continued in its efforts to keep the club in business and continued to supply the club - in spite of the unpaid debt.
    • May said council officials inquired about the unpaid debt shortly after Arthur's death but did not pursue it further until now, five years later.
    • But the voters pronounced on those and believed the Government parties' promises which are now an unpaid debt.
    • At the heart of the dispute is the way First National treats borrowers who have come before the court because of unpaid debts.
    • They've been miscategorizing most identity theft all along - chalking it up to unpaid debt and writing it off.
    • Mr Straw said legal safeguards were in place to stop oil revenues being seized by another country for unpaid debts.
    • The ship may ultimately have to be sold to cover the unpaid debts, as well as the crew's wages and costs for returning them home.
    • The rules of bankruptcy allow such deals to discharge a bankrupt, no matter how large the unpaid debt.
    • Police presently believe the murder was prompted either by unpaid debts or Khatibi's involvement with drug deals.
    • These and other unpaid debts represent cash that should be sitting in the city's bank account.
    • A close inspection of unpaid debts often reveals poor performance and unsolved issues.
    • Bulgarian police are working on the theory that banker Emil Kyulev was murdered because of large unpaid debts.
    • Their name and address plus the details of the account show along with a red card saying that their debt is unpaid.
    • Nothing is ever forgotten, and very few debts are left unpaid.
    • So the fact that the medical debts were unpaid says little, because it may reflect strategic payment of debts prior to bankruptcy.
    • With this infrastructure in place, what's to keep some group from saying that people with unpaid child support shouldn't be allowed to fly?
    Synonyms
    unsettled, outstanding, unresolved, unattended to, due, overdue, owing, owed, receivable, to be paid, payable, undischarged, in arrears, in the red
  • 2(of work or a period of leave) undertaken without payment.

    unpaid labor in the home
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Time Use Survey shows that young women 18-24 years do much more unpaid work than their male counterparts.
    • In addition, they also doubled the period of unpaid leave from its current level to eight.
    • Each year there are around 4.4 million adults undertaking some 430 million hours of unpaid work.
    • ‘We use unpaid work in the community to intervene in the way offenders think and behave,’ said Mr Munday.
    • This means that many migrants have to find unpaid work experience on their own.
    • Magistrates ordered him to do 240 hours of unpaid work within 12 months.
    • They generally feel that their work isn't valued, and they are doing up to $20,000 per year in unpaid work.
    • I always found great sport in asking these questions when I was particularly grumpy after a period of unpaid overtime.
    • He was also ordered to undertake 150 hours unpaid work and to pay the £1,000 compensation to YorkBoat.
    • Andersen did unpaid work which helped sharpen up Labour's policies, especially in the field of taxation.
    • The teenager pleaded guilty and magistrates ordered him to perform 60 hours of unpaid work within 12 months.
    • Community penalties involve undertaking unpaid work amounting to seven million hours ordered each year.
    • Also, because she is expected to have unpaid work experience with a vet in her four weeks' holiday, she has no chance to pay anything off during the course.
    • To the organisers of these events, it brings days and nights of unpaid work that is often taken for granted by those competing.
    • There are 6.5 million volunteers in Canada who contribute about one billion unpaid work hours each year.
    • But he chose the unfashionable business stream, and thence with unpaid work experience on the Times business desk.
    • While the research found that most vacation work would be paid, more than 9,500 British students will opt for unpaid work experience.
    • An estimated 109m people, about 56% of all American adults, volunteered last year for unpaid work.
    • We discussed the idea of my taking one day a week as unpaid leave for a finite period of time, or until new client work came in.
    • The court will be able to insist they undertake unpaid work, drug or alcohol treatment or supervision while the sentence is on-going.
    1. 2.1 (of a person) not receiving payment for work done.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The girls are treated like unpaid slaves or prisoners, except there is no crime and no fixed sentence.
      • Moreover, if local leaders receive a wage, they are resented by unpaid volunteers.
      • Surrey's unpaid labourer, Zaheer Khan, is announced fit for the Pakistan match on Sunday.
      • Dealler points out that some of the problems of BSE only came to light because independent, unpaid scientists drew them to the attention of parliament and the media.
      • He said carers, including tens of thousands of unpaid workers, are saving the exchequer €2 billion each year.
      • But she starts in Biblical times, where the template is laid for the future treatment of wives as obedient, unpaid servants.
      • Thomas went to his grave regarding Eleanour as nothing more than a dear friend, useful as an unpaid secretary, the willing amanuensis who typed his manuscripts for him.
      • And one of the consenting parties, in addition to being just barely an adult, was an unpaid employee of the other.
      • Under the new ‘regime’ Sophie and her brother Jason are just two of the club's board of unpaid directors.
      • According to the last census there are 15, 141 of these unsung and unpaid heroes in Merton with around 2,000 of them young carers.
      • When the second successor company was registered in 1997, he became a paid manager and unpaid director of that business.
      • The Seoul researchers collected 242 eggs from 16 unpaid volunteers.
      • Carers of people with mental illness, unsung heroes or unpaid slaves?
      • The Times ought to be ashamed for its scheme to get unpaid members of the public to contribute to its website.
      • Typically, these are at least as starved for funds as the province, and the job at hand inevitably has to be picked up by groups of unpaid volunteers.
      • The man in the yellow shirt is an unpaid volunteer from the neighborhood, a member of the local crime policing forum, set up to the aid of police.
      • These are the unpaid heroes of grass-roots rugby, who get no fees for turning out to referee.
      • However, the massive demand for such nurses has led to a need for unpaid volunteers, mostly women on moderate incomes with children of their own.
      • However inept these postings were, they were unpaid volunteers expressing their unscripted enthusiasm.
      • His official title is director of football at Exeter City, his real title is unpaid director of football.
      Synonyms
      voluntary, volunteer, honorary, unrewarded, unremunerative, unsalaried, gratuitous, free
 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 9:51:11