Word Meanings - EMPLOYE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
One employed by another; a clerk or workman in the service of an employer.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of EMPLOYE)
Related words: (words related to EMPLOYE)
- WORKMANSHIP
1. The art or skill of a workman; the execution or manner of making anything. Due reward For her praiseworthy workmanship to yield. Spenser. Beauty is nature's brag, and must be shown . . . Where most may wonder at the workmanship. Milton. 2. That - EMPLOYER
One who employs another; as, an employer of workmen. - OPERATIVE
Based upon, or consisting of, an operation or operations; as, operative surgery. (more info) 1. Having the power of acting; hence, exerting force, physical or moral; active in the production of effects; as, an operative motive. It holds in all - LABORER
One who labors in a toilsome occupation; a person who does work that requires strength rather than skill, as distinguished from that of an artisan. - WORKMAN
1. A man employed in labor, whether in tillage or manufactures; a worker. 2. Hence, especially, a skillful artificer or laborer. - WORKMANLY
Becoming a skillful workman; skillful; well performed; workmanlike. - WORKMANLIKE
Becoming a workman, especially a skillful one; skillful; well performed. - EMPLOYEE
One employed by another. - WORKINGMAN
A laboring man; a man who earns his daily support by manual labor. - EMPLOYE
One employed by another; a clerk or workman in the service of an employer. - OPERATIVELY
In an operative manner. - BREADWINNER
The member of a family whose labor supplies the food of the family; one who works for his living. H. Spencer. - COLABORER
One who labors with another; an associate in labor. - UNDERLABORER
An assistant or subordinate laborer. Locke. - UNEMPLOYED
1. Nor employed in manual or other labor; having no regular work. 2. Not invested or used; as, unemployed capital. - UNOPERATIVE
Producing no effect; inoperative. South. - INOPERATIVE
Not operative; not active; producing no effects; as, laws renderd inoperative by neglect; inoperative remedies or processes. - DISWORKMANSHIP
Bad workmanship. Heywood. - TUT-WORKMAN
One who does tut-work. Tomlinson. - COOPERATIVE
Operating jointly to the same end. Coöperative society, a society established on the principle of a joint-stock association, for the production of commodities, or their purchase and distribution for consumption, or for the borrowing and lending - DAY-LABORER
One who works by the day; -- usually applied to a farm laborer, or to a workman who does not work at any particular trade. Goldsmith.