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wage

salary / pay
Transitive Verb[C/U] Both
pl: wagespast: wagedpp: wageding: wagingcomp: []sup: []

In a financial sense, this term carries a connotation of hourly or daily labor, distinguishing it from a salary, which implies a professional annual contract. It evokes the image of a laborer receiving payment based on the time spent working rather than a fixed yearly sum. When used as a verb, it shifts from money to conflict. It suggests a deliberate, sustained, and organized effort to achieve a goal through struggle. It is almost exclusively paired with words like war, battle, or campaign, giving it a heavy, strategic, and often aggressive tone.

Countable when referring to a specific rate of pay for a job (the minimum wage). Uncountable when referring to the general concept of payment for labor (wage inflation).

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Tuesday afternoon; Jessica is staring at a spreadsheet while Mr. Sterling is in a sensory deprivation tank.
Jessica

The union's losing it. We need to bump the hourly wage or they'll walk.

Jessica
Mr. Sterling
Mr. Sterling

Money is just a heavy anchor. Let them float in the void for a bit.

💡
Jessica uses 'losing it' (slang for becoming irrational/angry) and 'walk' (idiom for quitting or going on strike). The tension arises from Jessica's panic over labor costs versus Mr. Sterling's detached, metaphorical worldview.

Meanings

Nounsalary

A fixed regular payment, typically paid on a daily or weekly basis, made by an employer to an employee.

"The workers are demanding a higher minimum wage to keep up with inflation."

Transitive Verbpay
[~ action]

To carry on or engage in a battle, war, or campaign of some kind.

"The government decided to wage a war against organized crime."

Related Words

Last Updated: June 9, 2026Report an Error