Thesaurus Dictionary

Try "happy" or "love"

Searching for...

No matching words found

Try a different search term or browse the dictionary

Synonyms and antonyms of General words relating to jobs and work in American Thesaurus

General words relating to jobs and work

background (noun)

the type of career, training, or education that someone has had

business (noun)

used for talking about business compared to things that you do when you are not working

call (noun)

a strong feeling of wanting to do something, especially as a career

calling (noun)

a strong feeling that you must do a particular type of job, especially one that you consider morally good

career (noun)

a job or series of related jobs that you do, especially a profession that you spend a lot of your working life in

career (noun)

the time when a sports player, entertainer, or artist is active or working

career (noun)

connected with someone’s career

career (adjective)

a career politician, soldier, teacher, etc. wants to be in their profession for a long time and to achieve success or power in it

co-creation (noun)

a way of working together where people from different backgrounds are invited to jointly produce a product or service that will benefit all of them

collaboration (noun)

the process of working with someone to produce something

collaboration (noun)

something that people produce by working together

delegation (noun)

the process of giving some of your work, duties, or responsibilities to a more junior person or organization

division of labor (noun)

the way that the work that needs to be done is divided so that different people are responsible for different parts of it

employment (noun)

work that you are paid regularly to do for a person or company

employment (noun)

relating to jobs and work

encore career (noun)

a second career that someone has after retiring from the first

function (noun)

someone’s job or particular responsibility

gig (noun)

a piece of work that you do for money, especially if you are self-employed

hot desking (noun)

a method of working in which people do not have their own desk in an office but use any desk that is available at a particular time

incumbency (noun)

formal an official position

incumbency (noun)

formal the fact of having an official position, or the time during which someone has it

job (noun)

work that you do regularly to earn money. When you ask someone about their job, you usually say “What do you do?”, and not “What is your job?” The answer would usually be “I am a ...” or “I work as a...”, and not “My job is...”

job description (noun)

a list of all the things that someone must do in their job

job security (noun)

the knowledge that your job is permanent as long as you want it to be

job-sharing (noun)

a system in which two people share the work from a single job, so that each one works for part of the day or week

labor (noun)

work

labour ()

the British spelling of labor

line (noun)

the way that communication, authority, or responsibility is shared between people in an organization

livelihood (noun)

something such as your work that provides the money that you need to live

load (noun)

an amount of work that a person, piece of equipment, or system has to do at one time

metier (noun)

very formal the type of work that you are good at, or the subject that you know the most about

occupation (noun)

a job. This word is used especially on forms and in formal writing

occupational (adjective)

relating to, or caused by, your job

off-site (noun)

a short trip for all the employees in a particular department or company, especially so that they can learn more about each other and how to work together better

opening (noun)

a job that needs a person to do it

opportunity (noun)

a job that is available

opus (noun)

humorous any piece of work that someone produces

order book (noun)

the total work that a company has agreed to do in the future, which shows how safe its workersjobs are

pluralism (noun)

formal a situation in which someone has more than one job or position, especially in a church

portfolio working (noun)

a way of organizing your working life in which you work for several different employers and do several different jobs at one time instead of working all the time for one employer

position (noun)

a job in a company

probation (noun)

a period of time during which someone who has been given a new job is watched to see whether they can do the job well and stay in the position

profession (noun)

a job that you need special skills and qualifications to do, especially one with high social status

professional (adjective)

relating to your work or career

professionally (adverb)

in a way that is connected with your work or career

service (noun)

work or duties done for a person or an organization

situation (noun)

formal a job

slot (noun)

a job that someone has as part of a team of people

start out ()

used about someone’s career

sustenance (noun)

formal a way of earning the money that is necessary to live

tenure (noun)

the period of time during which someone has an important job or is an elected official

term (noun)

a period of time during which a politician or other official holds their job

trade (noun)

a job or type of work that someone is trained to do

vacancy (noun)

a job that is available for someone to do

walk of life ()

the job someone does or the position they have in society

work (noun)

a job that someone is paid to do

work (noun)

the things that you do as part of your job

work (noun)

something that someone makes or does in their job

work experience (noun)

the experience and skills that you gain in doing a particular job

working life (noun)

the period of time in your life that you work

working practices (noun)

the way that work is usually done in a particular company or organization

workload (noun)

the amount of work that a person or organization has to do