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The phrase "an honorarium" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used to refer to a payment given for services rendered, especially for professional services that are not formally contracted.
Example: "The speaker will receive an honorarium for their participation in the conference."
Alternatives: "a fee" or "a stipend".
Exact(60)
"You can't accept an honorarium," he said.
(It came complete with an honorarium).
Supervisors receive an honorarium of $500.
What if I am receiving an honorarium?
The name is an honorarium as much as anything.
I was paid an honorarium of exactly $100,000.
Lecturers are paid an honorarium of a few hundred dollars.
Their faculty nominators receive an honorarium of $1,500.
Cornell will, however, pay an honorarium without one.
My only demand is that I get an Aston Martin car as an honorarium".
Yes, Rousso said: two thousand dollars, as an honorarium, which was normal.
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