Stipend in a sentence as a noun

If you want to use PPP then you need to adjust the stipend that way too.

"Although the paper had a small budget, he gave me a modest stipend for each article.

In what conceivable way do the people in a trailer park in a rural community receive a stipend?

Even if every slacker in the world gets a $20k stipend, there's plenty of incentive to solve problems and make money.

Income from ventures goes into the checking account, bills for the expenses are paid from that, you pay yourself a monthly stipend.

Six great schools looked at my application and offered me somewhere between a discounted rate and a full ride + stipend on top of that.

> Correction: this is what happens when poor Cherokee receive a stipend, but let's not pretend that the Cherokee are the ones we're worried about here.

Correction: this is what happens when poor Cherokee receive a stipend, but let's not pretend that the Cherokee are the ones we're worried about here.

The class also includes a stipend for students to continue their research projects during the summer following the course.

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.

I went to Palmer Station as a volunteer on an oceanographic research cruise and was able to use my travel stipend to stay in Chile for a few weeks afterward.

If true, then perhaps it suggests that a stipend program, if one were to be set up, would best be presented as if it were an earned entitlement or payout -- rather like we do with Social Security.

But we're talking about a speaker, someone who may have been invited, who probably had the cost of the conference waived and possibly even been reimbursed or given a stipend for airfare and hotel, and very likely appears in name and photo in conference promotional materials.

Stipend definitions

noun

a sum of money allotted on a regular basis; usually for some specific purpose