1 to pay someone for work that they have done or services that they have provided:
be remunerated for sth We have had a lot of input into the project and we expect to be remunerated adequately for the work we have done.
Many advisors will be remunerated by commission, which means if you do not proceed with their recommendation no fee is paid.
In that sense, while remunerated and recognised in the present, their human capital may be eroded, and their future employability jeopardised.
In addition, members are more satisfied when they feel their skills are valued and remunerated appropriately.
The donation of tissues and organs cannot be remunerated and commercialization of organs is forbidden.
Participation was voluntary, complied with institutional ethical guidelines and was remunerated at the standard rate.
A type of ' professional ' donor is also available to replace family members or friends, these donors are remunerated by the families involved.
Care staff were remunerated from their employer's training budget.
The fact that physicists have to be remunerated, and the different forms and modalities of this remuneration, give material flesh to the process distributing credit.
On family farms, most of the labor is supplied by the farmer and unpaid family members and thus has to be remunerated by profit.