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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
salaried
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
employee
▪ With current inflation most wage-earners or salaried employees have regular increases in basic remuneration.
▪ These strategic positions are not filled by just another group of salaried employees.
▪ What are the arrangements if you retire from the organisation as a salaried employee but become a retained consultant or contractor?
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Despite these objections to creating full-time salaried councillors, the demands placed on those elected can be considerable.
▪ It is therefore interesting to find such a marked increase in salaried employment even over this five-year period.
▪ Once they become salaried members of a government's service, more problems arose from the economic point of view.
▪ Overwhelmingly, you do not see full-time salaried employment as your ultimate goal.
▪ The salaried partner is frequently encountered in modern solicitors' firms.
▪ The party had 143 salaried staff, most of whom it could no longer afford to keep.
▪ These strategic positions are not filled by just another group of salaried employees.
▪ With current inflation most wage-earners or salaried employees have regular increases in basic remuneration.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Salaried

Salary \Sal"a*ry\ v. t. [imp. & p. p. Salaried; p. pr. & vb. n. Salarying.] To pay, or agree to pay, a salary to; to attach salary to; as, to salary a clerk; to salary a position.

Salaried

Salaried \Sal"a*ried\, a. Receiving a salary; paid by a salary; having a salary attached; as, a salaried officer; a salaried office.

Wiktionary
salaried

a. 1 Describing someone who is paid a salary as opposed to an hourly worker. Generally indicating a professional or manager. 2 Describing someone who is paid monthly as opposed to weekly.

WordNet
salaried
  1. adj. receiving a salary; "salaried members of the staff" [ant: freelance]

  2. receiving or eligible for compensation; "salaried workers"; "a stipendiary magistrate" [syn: compensated, remunerated, stipendiary]

  3. for which money is paid; "a paying job"; "remunerative work"; "salaried employment"; "stipendiary services" [syn: compensable, paying(a), remunerative, stipendiary]

salary
  1. n. something that remunerates; "wages were paid by check"; "he wasted his pay on drink"; "they saved a quarter of all their earnings" [syn: wage, pay, earnings, remuneration]

  2. [also: salaried]

salaried

See salary

Usage examples of "salaried".

Permanent cadre are Ks deniable operators on a salaried retainer not freelancers like me, called on to carry out shit jobs that no one else wants.

A harsh business system is forcing the vast majority of workers, salaried and unsalaried, full-time and part-time, to extend their hours, or so these economists argue.

But owing to the stupid money system, which these laborers them selves help to keep in force, the results of their combined efforts were either usurped by an unproductive class fortunate enough to be born rich, or those shrewd enough to accumulate money, such as trust managers, bankers, real estate speculators, stock jobbers, and brokers, gamblers, burglars, money loan swindlers, high salaried clergymen, etc.

And it bore little or no resemblance to the book as we have it now--now that the salaried polisher has holystoned all of the genuine Eddyties out of it.

Well into the 19th century, artists and innovators were commissioned - and salaried - to produce their works of art and contrivances.

It is not to be wondered at that people crave office, some salaried position, in order to escape the anxieties, the personal responsibilities, of a single-handed struggle with the world.

It was a sidelight on the social system which deputes its emotions to a handful of salaried wooflers that had stood the Saint in good stead before.

The doctors, as salaried employees of the Provincial Health Service, had to make-do on a fixed income not much in excess of $35,000.

Practically every big manufacturing plant in the United States has on its payrolls men acting as engineers, foremen, or laborers who are drawing from $8o to $100 per month as detectives either (1) to keep their employers informed as to the workings of the labor unions, (2) to report to the directors the actual conduct of the business by its salaried officers, superintendents, and overseers, or (3) to ascertain and report to outside competing concerns the methods and processes made use of, the materials utilized, and the exact cost of production.

On his way to school he looked at the stocks and the whipping post, which had a salaried official to attend to the duties connected with it.