安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Help with understanding Apostrophe for workers or workers
2 is correct The democracy is that of multiple workers, so workers is plural Because of that, the apostrophe applies to the plural form and is therefore after the s If the democracy was the "property" of a single worker, then it would be that worker's democracy
- What term describes workers that are not knowledge workers?
29 The man who coined the term knowledge workers differentiated them from manual workers Management guru Peter Drucker coined the term "knowledge worker " In his 1969 book, The Age of Discontinuity, Drucker differentiates knowledge workers from manual workers and insists that new industries will employ mostly knowledge workers
- compound adjectives - Highly skilled or high-skilled? - English . . .
A Wikipedia article contains skilled, unskilled, semi-skilled, non-skilled and highly-skilled, as well as "Obama Immigration Order to Impact Millions, Includes Provisions for High-Skilled Workers"
- what is the difference between employee and staff and worker
I am reading Human Resource(HR) book, and I can not understand employee, staff and worker Please explain in detail, thank!
- Is there an implied be verb in the sentence American workers facing or . . .
0 American workers facing a less prosperous future than their parents’ generation have gotten the message—or at least a version of it Can anyone please explain the structure? Is there any implied be verb after workers, like workers are facing?
- A word for people who work under a manager
Where I used to work, we called the people who reported to a manager his her reports This word does not have any of the negative connotations words like subordinates or underlings carry Oxford Dictionaries Online lists this as the meaning of the word and also gives an example Report noun An employee who reports to another employee 'And, I have been a better, more consistent mentor teacher
- Employees vs Staff - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The second may seem a bit unnatural because employee is emphasizing that the workers are getting paid, but this is irrelevant in the context of your sentence (just a theory)
- single word requests - Derogatory term for a corporate employee . . .
While this reference suggests the term originally referred to unskilled physical laborers, it's easy to imagine how the meaning could've shifted gradually over the past century to include low-status office workers A variation of the term that makes this more explicit is corporate stiff
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