dictionnaire Allemand - Anglais

Deutsch - English

Prämie Anglais:

1. premium


He received a premium for his hard work.
Because of your high-risk job, you'll no doubt have to pay a premium for health insurance.
You have to pay premium in regular time intervals.
I only buy premium cheese, I don't like the taste of the cheap products.
The insurance company offers attractive premiums.
You pay 10,000 yen a month as an insurance premium.
How much is the premium?
Imogen of the Internet is fighting six bored housewives to win an eBay auction for a bag of premium chai tea.

Anglais mot "Prämie"(premium) se produit dans des ensembles:

Flashcards aus dem Buch - "Mr Honey's Insurance Di...
Flashcards aus dem Buch - "A Revised and Illustrat...
Flashcards aus dem Buch - "The Great Round World a...
Flashcards aus dem Buch - "The Great Round World a...
Flashcards aus dem Buch - "The Great Round World a...

2. bonus


I received my bonus.
I was disappointed to see that my bonus was a bit less than I was expecting.
My bonus doesn't come close to covering all the loan payments I have to make.
I've got a 500 euro bonus for the success of my project.
The company used to give discretionary bonus payments.
The company gave employees a bonus for bringing in new business. He was given a bonus of £6,000. The sales agent earned a bonus for exceeding her targets. The company paid a bonus to all employees this quarter. I got a nice Christmas bonus this year.
The Chancellor has warned that the row about paying bonuses threatens to put jobs at risk.
Is management really going to consider our bonus, or was that just lip service?
Management tried to appease labor by offering them a bonus.
We'll give you as many bonus miles as the normal air miles!
If all goes well, there's a bonus in it for you.
Last year I used my Christmas bonus to pay off my visa card.
Annual bonuses are related to performance.
I can walk to work, which is another bonus of the new job.
Black money scandal, 11th of September, expenseuro, the Old Europe, Hartz IV, Madame Chancellor, fanmile, climatic catastrophe, financial crisis, wreckage bonus and citizen of anger are the last ten words of the year in Germany.