6,000 US Dollars a Week

Representing 6,000 dollars a week in structured data on a website is complex but not difficult.

"$6,000 a week" is a quantitative value. Its main properties are a monetary amount and a unit of measurement.

"$6,000" is the monetary amount in "$6,000 a week"

"a week" is the unit of measure in "$6,000 a week". It actually means "per week". Therefore, the unit of measurement is a reciprocal of the unit of time a week represents.

Alternate Names

There are alternative names for "a week", for example "per week", " / week", "/wk", or "weekly".

Also, people use different names for a "dollar", such as its currency symbol "$", its code "USD", or various nicknames. A common nickname for the "US dollar" is "buck"

Combining these different expressions with different formats of the number, we get a long list of alternate names for the same quantitative value.

  • $6,000 per week
  • $6,000 weekly
  • $6000 per week
  • $6000 a week
  • $6000 weekly
  • 6,000 dollars per week
  • 6,000 dollars weekly
  • 6000 dollars per week
  • 6000 dollars a week
  • 6000 dollars weekly
  • 6,000 USD per week
  • 6,000 USD weekly
  • 6,000 bucks per week
  • 6,000 bucks weekly
  • $6k per week
  • $6k weekly
  • 6k per week
  • 6k a week
  • 6k weekly
  • 6 thousand dollars per week
  • 6 thousand dollars a week
  • 6 thousand dollars weekly

Quantitative Value Schema

Below is an example schema for "$6,000 a month".

        
{
    "@type": "QuantitativeValue",
    "name": "$6,000 per week",
    "unitCode": "H85",
    "alternateName": [
        "$6,000 per week",
        "$6,000 weekly",
        "$6000 per week",
        "$6000 a week",
        "$6000 weekly",
        "6,000 dollars per week",
        "6,000 dollars weekly",
        "6000 dollars per week",
        "6000 dollars a week",
        "6000 dollars weekly",
        "6,000 USD per week",
        "6,000 USD weekly",
        "6,000 bucks per week",
        "6,000 bucks weekly",
        "$6k per week",
        "$6k weekly",
        "6k per week",
        "6k a week",
        "6k weekly",
        "6 thousand dollars per week",
        "6 thousand dollars a week",
        "6 thousand dollars weekly"
    ],
    "description": "An amount of $6,000 (US Dollars) per week",
    "disambiguatingDescription": "For example a weekly salary of 6,000 dollars or a weekly family budget of $6,000.",
    "value": {
        "@type": "MonetaryAmount",
        "name": "$6,000",
        "description": "An amount of $6,000 (US Dollars)",
        "value": 6000,
        "currency": "USD",
        "alternateName": [
            "$6,000",
            "$6000",
            "6,000 dollars",
            "6000 dollars",
            "6,000 USD",
            "6,000 bucks",
            "$6k",
            "6k",
            "6 thousand dollars"
        ],
        "sameAs": [
            "https://missingentities.com/entities/monetary-amount/usd/6000/"
        ]
    },
    "sameAs": "https://missingentities.com/entities/quantitative-value/usd/6000/a-week/"
}
        
    

Schema.org defines a specific schema type for a quantitative value. Its main attributes are unitCode and value. The unitCode property uses UN/CEFACT Common Code Rec 20 (3 characters) as value, e.g. "H85".

"H85" is the UN/CEFACT Common Code for "reciprocal week". The symbol for "H85" is "1/wk".

How to use the Schema for 6,000 US Dollars per week?

You can simply copy the schema above and paste it into the JSON-LD code of your schema definition. Only use this quantitative value schema in attributes where allowed. Otherwise, your schema will be invalid.

Feel free to trim the list of alternate names, if some of these are not used in your context. Yet, if you use different names, feel free to add them to the list.

Quantitative Value Schema Generator

Generate the quantitative value schema for the "amount per week" you need.

Contexts

Lease

"$6,000 per week" could refer to a weekly lease payment for a room or a vehicle.

Paycheck

"$6,000 weekly" could refer to a paycheck for hourly wages. Hourly wages are often paid at the end of a week.

Related Entities