gratuity$32626$ - traduzione in greco
Diclib.com
Dizionario ChatGPT
Inserisci una parola o una frase in qualsiasi lingua 👆
Lingua:

Traduzione e analisi delle parole tramite l'intelligenza artificiale ChatGPT

In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

  • come viene usata la parola
  • frequenza di utilizzo
  • è usato più spesso nel discorso orale o scritto
  • opzioni di traduzione delle parole
  • esempi di utilizzo (varie frasi con traduzione)
  • etimologia

gratuity$32626$ - traduzione in greco

SUM OF MONEY CUSTOMARILY TENDERED TO SERVICE SECTOR WORKERS
Gratuities; To Insure Prompt Service; Tipping by region; Pourboire; Tipping in New Zealand; Tipping in Australia; Tipping in Canada; Tip (Gratuity); Tipping in the UK; Trinkgeld; Table money; Tip (gratuity); Tronc (gratuity); Gratuity jar
  • Coat check staff are usually tipped for their service and this photo shows a coat-check area at the Berliner Congress Centrum (BCC) in Alexanderplatz, Berlin, Germany
  • Buskers often punctuate their performances with requests for tips
  • Golfers often tip the caddies who carry their golf clubs
  • A taxi driver waiting for customers in Havana, Cuba
  • older golfer]]
  • Waiters at the [[King David Hotel]]
  • A server at Luzmilla's restaurant
  • Hair stylists are among the service workers who are often tipped for their service in the United States
  • Waiters in [[Wrocław]], Poland, in the early 1900s
  • [[Crossing sweeper]]s cleared the way for rich people to cross the road without dirtying their clothes and they were normally tipped for this service (London, 1893), while the modern version of this service are so-called 'squeegee men' who clean windshields during the time vehicles are stopped for traffic lights (often without the consent of the driver).

gratuity      
n. φιλοδώρημα

Definizione

gratuity
[gr?'tju:?ti]
¦ noun (plural gratuities)
1. formal a tip given to a waiter, porter, etc.
2. Brit. a sum of money paid to an employee at the end of a period of employment.
Origin
C15 (denoting graciousness): from OFr. gratuite or med. L. gratuitas 'gift'.

Wikipedia

Gratuity

A gratuity (often called a tip) is a sum of money customarily given by a customer to certain service sector workers such as hospitality for the service they have performed, in addition to the basic price of the service.

Tips and their amount are a matter of social custom and etiquette, and the custom varies between countries and between settings. In some countries, it is customary to tip servers in bars and restaurants, taxi drivers, hair stylists and so on. However, in some places tipping is not expected and may be discouraged or considered insulting. The customary amount of a tip can be a specific range or a certain percentage of the bill based on the perceived quality of the service given.

It is illegal to offer tips to some groups of workers, such as U.S. government workers and more widely police officers; the tips may be regarded as bribery. A fixed percentage service charge is sometimes added to bills in restaurants and similar establishments. Tipping may not be expected when a fee is explicitly charged for the service.

Giving a tip is typically irreversible, differentiating it from the reward mechanism of a placed order, which can be refunded. From a theoretical economic point of view, gratuities may solve the principal–agent problem (the situation in which an agent, such as a server, is working for a principal, such as a restaurant owner or manager) and many managers believe that tips provide incentive for greater worker effort. However, studies of the practice in America suggest that tipping is often discriminatory or arbitrary: workers receive different levels of gratuity based on factors such as age, sex, race, hair color and even breast size, and the size of the gratuity is found to be only tenuously related to the quality of service.