[General] paying job vs. paid job - UsingEnglish. com Paid work! It should've be "paid work" My mistake Sorry about that And I know I'm asking too many questions Please make allowance for my being a non-native speaker My question is in a context such as this does "paying job paid work" have anything to do with "steady job one-time job for money"?
Make a payment and pay for | UsingEnglish. com ESL Forum I paid for next month's lessons [This is a basic statement about something that happened in the past] I have (already) paid for next month's lesson [This means the act of paying happened in the past but is still somehow relevant ]
pay someone to do something or pay for someone to do something Meaning: Her parents paid some money to a third person in order for her to (be able to) go to Canada or Her parents paid some money to a third person for her visit to Canada Conclusions: Bryon from sentence 1, you from sentence 2 and her from sentence three are all recipents of action which result from some money being transferred in favour
Pay Peanuts Meaning - UsingEnglish. com What does the idiom 'Pay Peanuts' mean? With a clear, concise definition and usage examples, discover this idiom's meaning and usage in the English language
5 Phrasal Verbs With PAY - UsingEnglish. com Definitions of English phrasal verbs with 'PAY' Learn the meaning of phrasal verbs starting with 'PAY', read definitions and view examples of English phrasal verbs from UsingEnglish com
ESL Worksheet: Just - UsingEnglish. com € The loan had been paid back fully € The loan hadn't been paid back yet Q3 - I had just a cup of coffee for breakfast € The speaker only had coffee € The speaker drank the coffee recently Q4 - He's just a child € He was born recently € The speaker feels sorry for him Q5 - She only just passed the exam € The exam was not a long
cost or costing? anyone | UsingEnglish. com ESL Forum The "cost" of something is the price to be paid for it "Costing" generally refers to the process by which one decides on what the cost is going to be [although in some contexts it can also mean the price paid, for example, "I bought two apples, each costing me 50 pence"] Taking your two questions: 1