pay out
See also: payout
English
Verb
pay out (third-person singular simple present pays out, present participle paying out, simple past and past participle paid out or (nautical sense, rare) payed out)
- To distribute money; to disburse
- 2019 March 11, Moise, Imani, “Wells Fargo CEO to detail customer remediation to U.S. Congress”, in Meredith Mazzilli, editor, Reuters, archived from the original on 27 October 2022, REGULATORY NEWS - AMERICAS:
- Since 2016, the bank has reviewed 165 million accounts, contacted more than 40 million customers and payed out millions in compensation, Sloan said in his opening statement submitted to the House Financial Services Committee on Monday.
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- (nautical) To slacken a rope by lengthening it; to allow a rope to run out.
- To repay, take revenge
- 1981, P. L. Travers, chapter 7, in Mary Poppins, revised edition:
- The pigeon, very offended, flew back to the Bird Woman and, to pay out Mary Poppins, stuck the rose in the ribbon of the Bird Woman's hat.
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- (Australia, informal, transitive) To make fun of or insult, often in a teasing manner.
Translations
to distribute money; to disburse
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nautical: to slacken by lengthening
to repay, take revenge
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Anagrams
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