clerkish 的 2 个定义
- a person employed, as in an office, to keep records, file, type, or perform other general office tasks.
- a salesclerk.
- a person who keeps the records and performs the routine business of a court, legislature, board, etc.
- (7)
- to act or serve as a clerk.
clerkish 近义词
等同于 clerical
更多clerkish例句
- The sales clerk just laughed, telling him he was out of bullets and had only six guns in his inventory.
- Some clerks are prominent in conservative media, and among law professors.
- Later, clerks published smaller, single sheets or annual subscriptions that Londoners would carry with them as part of the daily news.
- In Chula Vista, a city with a significantly larger budget than National City and Imperial Beach, the clerk simply tells the mayor and Council members how many comments were received and gives them a brief overview of their contents.
- As a high-ranking clerk, Howard appears to have been involved in policy.
- Judge Hinkle said “the Constitution requires the Clerk to issue such licenses.”
- Bob Cratchit, the clerk who is the father of Tiny Tim and who meekly serves Scrooge, is paid fifteen shillings a week.
- As a way to be more available to needy souls outside the church, Williams took a clerk job at Walgreens pharmacy.
- On October 5, 2013, Wilson pointed a pistol at a postal clerk.
- But instead of talking to us and resolving the issue, or getting a manager involved, the clerk calls the cops.
- “You appear to feel it so,” rejoined Mr. Pickwick, smiling at the clerk, who was literally red-hot.
- The office of clerk of the court is about to be sold, having been placed at fifteen hundred pesos.
- Hilda suggested that the ticket-clerk should be interrogated, but the aperture of communication with him was shut.
- My father took me to the office in which I was to make a start and presented me to the chief clerk.
- Except the chief clerk, whose salary was about £160, I do not believe there was another whose pay exceeded £100 a year.