Thesaurus Dictionary
Synonyms and antonyms of Words used to describe workers in American Thesaurus
Words used to describe workers
as your profession or job
designate (adjective)
formal chosen for a particular job but not yet officially doing that job
emeritus (adjective)
used in the title of someone such as a professor, chairman, or president if they no longer do that job
employable (adjective)
someone who is employable has the relevant skills, qualifications, experience, or qualities to get a job
ex officio (adjective)
formal an ex officio member of a committee or an organization is a member because the job they have allows them to be involved
general (adjective)
used, especially in job titles, for saying that someone is responsible for the whole of something
in a professional/personal/advisory etc. capacity ()
having a particular job or position when you do something
independent (adjective)
not employed or controlled by a company
itinerant (adjective)
traveling around frequently, especially in order to get work
manual (adjective)
a manual worker or laborer is someone whose job involves physical work using their hands
on loan ()
if someone is on loan to another organization, they are temporarily working for that organization before returning to their own
professional (adjective)
behaving in an appropriate way at work and doing your job well
professional (adjective)
working in a profession
professionally (adverb)
with the formal qualifications necessary for a particular profession
professionally (adverb)
showing the type of behavior and skills that someone with a professional job is expected to have
qualified (adjective)
thoroughly trained for a particular job
resident (adjective)
working regularly in a particular place
seasoned (adjective)
experienced in a particular activity or job
tenured (adjective)
having a job that you can do permanently, especially with a university or government department
unprofessional (adjective)
not behaving according to the standards of work or behavior of your profession
the unwaged (adjective)
British without any pay
voluntary (adjective)
a voluntary worker receives no pay. Another word for a person who works for no pay is a volunteer.
white-collar (adjective)
white-collar workers work in offices rather than doing physical work. People who do physical work in places such as factories and mines are called blue-collar workers.
worker (noun)
used for describing how well, quickly, etc. someone works