Stipend
in sentence
13 examples of Stipend in a sentence
For two years, he hardly made any money, a tiny stipend, but he apprenticed with this incredible housing developer named Tasneem Saddiqui.
Tuition, room and board, and a small
stipend
were offered to hundreds of students from the countries hardest hit by the storms.
And here's the key; they get to spend it with your subtle guidance, your subtle mentorship, your subtle supervision, and whether you call it an allowance, you call it commission for chores or you call it a weekly stipend, every single child, from the age of five on up, needs to be given some tangible amount of money on a weekly basis so that they understand how to function in a cashless society someday.
Every person at Automattic has a co-working
stipend
that they can put towards a co-working space or just to buy coffee, so they don't get kicked out of the coffee shop.
Each person who joins the company gets a home-office
stipend.
In return, they provide free food and shelter and sometimes pay the families a monthly
stipend.
In countries where the family’s cost of schooling girls is lowered either by a no-fee policy or by a
stipend
for girls who enroll in school, girls’ enrollment rate increases.
No one questions the generosity of this mutation, but it is far from clear that the nearly 15 million families receiving Bolsa Familia will maintain their current income level when the
stipend
disappears, or that it can be sustained indefinitely.
One jihadist who trained in al-Qaeda’s camps, and met bin Ladin, told me that upon his return from Afghanistan, he was invited to meet al-Ahmar’s associates and was given a monthly
stipend.
I save nothing out of my stipend, gentlemen, and that may be why I am less alarmed when people speak of taking it from me.'M. de Renal lived on excellent terms with his wife; but not knowing what answer to make to the question, which she timidly repeated: 'What harm can this gentleman from Paris do to the prisoners?' he was just about to lose his temper altogether when she uttered a cry.
M. de La Mole, whom I had never seen, saved me from disaster; he had only to say the word, and I was given a living in which all my parishioners are people in easy circumstances, above the common vices, and the
stipend
fills me with shame, so far out of proportion is it to my work.
From this society, little Mr. Perker detached himself, on his clerk being announced in a whisper; and repairing to the dining- room, there found Mr. Lowten and Job Trotter looking very dim and shadowy by the light of a kitchen candle, which the gentleman who condescended to appear in plush shorts and cottons for a quarterly stipend, had, with a becoming contempt for the clerk and all things appertaining to 'the office,' placed upon the table.
The fact is, they have no other attraction or reason for keeping the field than a trifle of stipend, which is not sufficient to make them willing to die for you.
Related words
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Society
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Person
People
Money
Gentleman
Families
Countries
Years
Willing
Whisper
Where
Vices
Uttered
Understand
Trifle
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Towards