0 payment for work in the form of money or something else of value:
There must be full disclosure of company directors' total emoluments.
1 a payment in money or some other form for work that has been done:
The emoluments of the highest-paid director totalled £382,000, including pension contributions.
And if my engineer friend places worldly emoluments upon a higher plane than professional efficiency, I dread for the safety of the bridges that he builds.
Its emoluments could be increased by many honourable means not covered by the regular salary.
Literature languished and died, since it brought neither honor nor emolument.
The orders of the Company have forbidden their servants to take any extraneous emoluments.
Through their friendly offices, his two sons, who had been sent out by a generous friend, were placed in situations of respectability and emolument.
A villager whose property they failed to protect, or whose recovery they could not make, could withhold for a time his share of jagalya's emoluments.
Altogether, the cost of law enforcement (some £1.2 million) rose to equal the emoluments for central, district and village officials.
Apprentices contracted with master craftsmen to be trained for a three-to-five year period were often provided with room and board and other emoluments.