salary

/ˈsæləri/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈsæləri/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈsa-lə-rē ˈsal-rē/ (ame, mw)

salary — 名詞

  • salarysingular
  • salariesplural

1. a set annual amount of money that a company pays someone for their work, typical

1.名詞B1
釋義

薪水;薪資

雇主定期支付給員工的固定報酬

a set annual amount of money that a company pays someone for their work, typically given in equal monthly payments — used for office and professional jobs rather than hourly or daily work

例句

Anong was happy with the salary her new employer offered for the marketing role.

Anong 對於新雇主為行銷職位提供的薪水感到滿意。

offer + salary for [position/role]

The school board voted to increase all teachers' salaries by three percent this year.

學校董事會今年投票通過將所有教師的薪水調漲百分之三。

increase salaries by [percentage]

同義詞
  • pay

    more general term that replaces both salary and wages in everyday speech, e.g. 'get paid', 'pay day'

  • wages

    paid by the hour or day, typically to manual, part-time, or service workers

  • earnings

    broader and more formal, can include salary, wages, freelance income, bonuses, etc.

  • remuneration

    formal term for total compensation including salary, benefits, and bonuses

文法句型

earn / receive / get + a + salary

a / an + adjective + salary

on a salary of [amount]

用法筆記

Unlike wages (工資/時薪), which are based on hours or days worked, salary is a fixed annual amount. Use salary for professional or office jobs (teacher, manager, engineer) and wages for hourly or manual work (cashier, labourer, cleaner). In Taiwan, both types are often called 薪水, but English maintains the distinction in formal contexts.

常見錯誤

I got my salary every week for working at the restaurant.
I got my wages every week for working at the restaurant.
💡Use 'wages' for hourly or weekly pay in service or manual jobs, not 'salary'.
Her salary from her investments is very high.
Her income from her investments is very high.
💡'Salary' only applies to money from an employer; 'income' covers money from any source.