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PAYE (Pay As You Earn)
yes
To pay for taxes
Do you mean pay-as-you-earn? In the UK? AKA PAYE
PAYE is pay as you earn. Tax and other stoppages are taken from your wages/salary before you receive your income in advance for the tax you are required to pay the government.
Jour de la paye. (Pay yeu)
If it's for taxation purposes then it stands for "Pay As You Earn"
paycheck is translated by "feuille de paye" or "fiche de paye" in French. (This is your monthly pay record, which is never paid by check except for interim workers)
Salaries expense -can be paid or unpaid while salaries payable is finally pay the salaries...
Please write your question in a complete sentence, telling what you want to know ABOUT salaries and pay rates.
PAYE (Pay as you Earn) records are held under their employers tax reference - a PAYE reference number. Each employer registered with HMRC is allocated a reference and this appears on all payroll related documents sent in by the employer e.g. P60's, P14's, P45's etc.
a "payness" is the southern way of saying "penis".EX: "Holy payness, that chick has a payness!"