employee
noun /ɪmˈplɔɪiː/
/ɪmˈplɔɪiː/
- a person who is paid to work for somebody
- The firm has over 500 employees.
- They have eight full-time and two part-time employees.
- government/state/federal employees
- He is in charge of hiring and firing employees.
- employees who work more than 20 hours per week
- employee rights/relations
- employee turnover/productivity
- In addition to a competitive salary, the company offers attractive employee benefits.
- A partnership can also improve employee morale.
Extra ExamplesTopics Working lifea2- A disgruntled former employee had filed a complaint.
- Freelance workers do not enjoy the benefits of employee status.
- Maintaining a diverse employee base requires ongoing commitment.
- She has campaigned for employee rights over the last 25 years.
- The company has only 60 employees.
- The company has worked to attract older employees.
- The company made hundreds of employees redundant.
- The retail industry loses $13 billion annually to employee theft.
- The value of state employee pension plans has plunged over the past three years.
- Why do my employees keep quitting?
- a civilian employee of the Army
- a disgruntled employee seeking revenge
- a fair reason for dismissing an employee
- an employee who sued for unpaid overtime
- employees who can perform comfortably in a highly diverse work environment
- the company's battle to recruit and retain employees
- The costs of hiring and training new employees is skyrocketing.
- The relationship between employees and employers has to be a partnership.
- It's important to value and treat employees well.
- The company pays employees pretty well.
- All employees receive basic safety training.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- paid
- salaried
- full-time
- …
- employ
- have
- hire
- …
- join something
- participate in something
- work
- …
- benefits
- status
- relations
- …