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doer

/doo-er/US // ˈdu ər //UK // (ˈduːə) //

办事人员,办事员,斗士,办事者

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a person or thing that does something, especially a person who gets things done with vigor and efficiency.
    • : a person characterized by action, as distinguished from one given to contemplation.
    • : Australian. an amusing or eccentric person; character.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Our signature show, “The Feedback Loop,” is leading the way, with brand new episodes every week featuring interviews with compelling thinkers and doers.

  • While audio is seen as subtractive from video, it is additive in terms of broadening the user base beyond so-called creators to the so-called doers, the folks who move the products and services from place to place.

  • Kellee Edwards, a force in the travel world, celebrates other doers in Travel and Leisure’s “Let’s Go Together.”

  • Too often, women see little reward or advancement for being the doers in their organizations.

  • It stratifies organizations into thinkers versus doers—executives versus employees—and in so doing, squanders vast quantities of human initiative.

  • Like Amalek, the Biblical evil-doer whose name we are enjoined to “blot out.”

  • Galon comes across as a doer for liberal causes, even if she does not always make headlines.

  • It was time to restock and reload, time for a new brand of evil-doer.

  • If we fail or delay to address a concern, matters may become worse, including for the wrong-doer.

  • In short, he was indispensable for the fulfillment of the Obama Project, a Doer in a team of Dreamers.

  • This statement does not cover suffering caused to the wrong-doer by natural acts of mine which do not proceed from ill-will.

  • It may not, therefore, hurt the person of any wrong-doer, or bear any ill-will to him and so cause him mental suffering.

  • Ahimsa requires deliberate self-suffering, not a deliberate injuring of the supposed wrong-doer.

  • I must apply the same rules to the wrong-doer who is my enemy or a stranger to me, as I would to my wrong-doing father or son.

  • If an injury was done to either, the Commune obtained or itself enforced justice against the wrong-doer.