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- MÉTIER Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
Métier, a French borrowing acquired by English speakers in the 18th century, typically implies a calling for which one feels especially fitted work, employment, occupation, calling, pursuit, métier, business mean a specific sustained activity engaged in especially in earning one's living
- MÉTIER Definition Meaning - Dictionary. com
Métier definition: a field of work; occupation, trade, or profession See examples of MÉTIER used in a sentence
- Métier | Luxury Handmade Leather Bags Accessories – Métier US
Métier London is a timeless collection of travel-inspired luxury leather goods for men and women, handcrafted in Italy and designed for travels great and small
- MÉTIER | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
MÉTIER definition: 1 the type of work that you have a natural ability to do well: 2 the type of work that you have… Learn more
- Metier - Definition, Meaning Synonyms - Vocabulary. com
A métier, in other words, is a job to which you are particularly well suited by your skills Your métier can also be a particularly outstanding talent or strong point in general If you're a chef, your divine steak frites might be your métier If you're a mechanic, your ability to understand transmissions may be your métier
- métier noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage . . .
Definition of métier noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more
- METIER definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
Your metier is the type of work that you have a natural talent for and do well [ formal ] It was as the magazine's business manager that he found his true metier
- métier - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Any activity that is pursued as a trade or profession; a calling An activity to which a person is particularly suited An outstanding or beneficial feature Inherited from Old French mestier, inherited from Vulgar Latin *misterium, a conflation of mystērium (whence French mystère) and ministerium (whence French ministère)
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