Sentence examples for a weekly compensation from inspiring English sources

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Exact(1)

He missed a year of work and had to make ends meet with a weekly compensation check of $265.

Similar(58)

In the meantime, her $700 weekly income was reduced to a weekly workers' compensation check for $218, which was not enough to pay her $943 monthly rent.

Patients received a weekly monetary compensation of €15 for providing urine samples, and were assured that the results of their urinalyses had no adverse consequences.

With bonuses for perfect attendance, grocery coupons and other benefits, his weekly compensation could now reach $90, he said.

In the latest development in Britney Spears's continuing family drama, a Los Angeles Superior Court commissioner ordered the troubled singer's estate to pay her father, James Spears, $2,500 in weekly compensation, and extended his authority over his daughter's affairs at least until July 31, The Associated Press reported.

The total cost per claim, total cost of weekly compensation and total costs of medical services were also calculated and converted to 2009 Australian dollar equivalent values.

Finally, for both groups we calculated measures of claim outcome, including total cost per claim, total cost of weekly compensation (i.e., income replacement benefits), total costs of medical services and number of days of income replacement paid.

43 It is also important to acknowledge that the present study does not report trends in claim costs or cost effectiveness analysis over the years; however, it is already known that repeat workers' compensation claims are associated with increased costs of medical and like services and weekly compensation paid.

Total costs of the initial claim in Group 2 were 52.6% of those incurred for the initial claim in Group 1. Similarly, costs incurred for weekly compensation were 50.1% of those incurred in Group 1, while costs for medical and like services were 59.0% of those incurred in Group 1.

The writer's father, a Presbyterian clergyman, quit preaching to devote his life to pushing anto-child-labor legislation, in Washington, D.C. Paradoxically, the writer's own labors as a child were prodigious, involuntary and underpaid; he worked like a dog from the age of six onwards for no other compensation than a weekly allowance.

By St. Clair McKelway The New Yorker, October 12 , 1963P. 193 The writer's father, a Presbyterian clergyman, quit preaching to devote his life to pushing anto-child-labor legislation, in Washington, D.C. Paradoxically, the writer's own labors as a child were prodigious, involuntary and underpaid; he worked like a dog from the age of six onwards for no other compensation than a weekly allowance.

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