- 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 is the difference between employee and staff and worker
There is no meaningful "difference" in your context From the HR perspective, employees, staff, and workers all simply mean the people paid wages by the company, towards whom the company has certain legal and moral obligations The terms may have slightly different connotations in various contexts, but nothing that can usefully be summarised
- Word to call a person that works in a store
specialty workers such as butchers, bakers, etc So there isn't a single word that would cover all persons working in a store I suppose salesperson might be the most common position
- Employees vs Staff - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
In your example, both sentences work just fine 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) For somebody learning English as a second language, both should be acceptable in my opinion
- 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" Although many credible examples for the collocation compound adjective 'high skilled' can be found on the internet, Google ngram results would
- Word for person that I supervise - English Language Usage Stack . . .
The workers being supervised don't have a role of being supervised, unlike the supervisor whose role is that of supervision That's why it's difficult to find an opposite for supervisor – Chris
- What is a word for someone who abuses their workers?
The workers could easily be abused and scorned, and yet adequately paid or even well-paid I think the question was asking about how they were treated, apart from remuneration Erwin Bolwidt's comment answer of "abusive manager" or "abusive boss" is much better, in my opinion
- abbreviations - What do CI, CIM, CID, CIB mean? - English Language . . .
I was talking to a friend about a girl, and he mentioned that “She can pretty much CI anything, CIB, CIM or CID ” I’m wondering what these mean The context was sexual experience Sorry if I missed
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