The usual spelling of the past tense and past participle of to pay is paid (compensated, salaried).
The spelling payed is still used, though rarely, for the release of rope or cable, where pay means to let out slowly.
There is usually just one way: "paid" (compensated, salaried).The form "payed" is still in use to mean "let out" (as with a line or cable), but the spelling paid is used for this as well. However, most spell-checkers accept payed for this reason.
That is the correct spelling of the verb form "bribed" (paid off, or enticed).
The informal term is spelled "prepped" (prepared).A similar word is prepaid, meaning paid ahead of time.
That is the correct spelling of the noun or verb commission (a regulatory group, a charter or paid work; to establish or order).* 2 m and 2 s
The term sought may actually be "grievance pay" (a penalty paid to union employees in compensation for a violation of a union contract agreement).
paid in full, in latin
Paid is the correct spelling for this phrase.
paid.
more if they can spell.
Depends if they can spell correctly or NOT.
There is usually just one way: "paid" (compensated, salaried).The form "payed" is still in use to mean "let out" (as with a line or cable), but the spelling paid is used for this as well. However, most spell-checkers accept payed for this reason.
That is the correct spelling of the verb form "bribed" (paid off, or enticed).
A paid advertising message on TV or radio is a commercial.
yeah your right it is PAYED.. i know it looks weird but that's the answer.
Nothing if they can't even spell their job title.
You can't even spell it so I doubt you'll ever be one.
The likely word is burst (blew up, exploded, popped).The similar verb forms are imbursed/reimbursed (paid) and disbursed (paid, gave out).