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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a rate for" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing pricing, fees, or costs associated with a service or product.
Example: "We need to establish a rate for the consulting services we will provide to the client."
Alternatives: "a fee for" or "a charge for".
Exact(52)
If men were dying at such a rate for fathering children, the G-8 would be holding emergency summits.
From one banker to another, who had just fixed a rate for him: "Dude, I owe you big time!
But locking in a rate for a relatively long period -- say, 60 days -- will often result in a higher interest rate and a more costly loan.
But borrowers looking for such guarantees these days face more hurdles and higher fees, especially if they need to lock in a rate for more than a month.
The Libor rate is supposedly a rate for unsecured loans between banks, but there do not seem to be many such transactions these days.
Margan says the existence these days of the fair work ombudsman has led to, across the board, an enforcement of a rate for horticulture of $21.08 an hour – with the more rogue contractors skipping town.
Similar(7)
The Better Business Bureau report, with an A rating for Trump University.
He called for new safeguards "to stop companies cutting costs by slashing workers' wages and transforming a race-to-the-bottom culture into a rate-for-the-job society".
Hence it retains its triple-A rating for now.
Ad rates for banner ads were already tumbling in the fall of 2000.
Moody's, like Fitch, has not revised its triple-A rating for America's credit.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com