employee / ɛmˈplɔɪ i, ˌɛm plɔɪˈi /

⭐基础词汇雇员员工职员雇工

employee 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a person working for another person or a business firm for pay.

employee 近义词

n. 名词 noun

person being paid for working for another or a corporation

更多employee例句

  1. Those calls have led some politicians, including Gloria, to urge the state to prioritize vaccinations for school employees who work with young children.
  2. As far as I know, we haven’t rewritten the employee handbook.
  3. Restrooms and coffee bars are spaced apart, he adds, encouraging employees to walk more.
  4. The Justice Department has asked a judge to dismiss the case against the controllers, who are federal employees, on procedural grounds.
  5. An asynchronous working environment is one in which there are no fixed hours for employees.
  6. Imagine waking up to find a guy who looks like a tech startup employee eating your charred crispy leg.
  7. In some cases, public employee unions even pushed private sector unions to endorse Republicans.
  8. Public employee unions are a little-acknowledged driver of this conflict.
  9. In January 2014, a lifelong District of Columbia parks employee, Medric Mills, collapsed while walking with his grown daughter.
  10. It said: “Tonie Tobias, Information Technology, President of GLEN, Gay and Lesbian Employee Network.”
  11. A building employee stated earlier today that Girra left the premises less than five minutes before the killing.
  12. A director of a bank is not an employee within the meaning of the acts under consideration.
  13. The fact that a workman furnishes tools and materials, or undertakes to do a specified job will not prevent his being an employee.
  14. An apprentice who is qualifying himself to operate an elevator is an employee within the Minnesota Act.
  15. Thus, one who is employed as a workman in a sawmill on such days as it was in operation for four months was not a casual employee.