
Employee vs Employe Which Is More Correct/Common
Employe is a rare dated alternative spelling of the more common employee (AHD) Ngram: an employe. Ngram: an employee vs an employe From French employé. Employe (plural …
grammar - "was employed at" vs "had been employed at" - English ...
Jul 15, 2019 · The past perfect is only used to refer to events that are in the past relative to some expressed or implied viewpoint in the past; and even then, it is often not used if the relative …
If you are talking "on behalf of" you and someone else, what is the ...
Which reflexive pronouns are used with 'on behalf of'? Having identified a fairly strong preference for "of my wife and I/me/myself" over "of I/me/myself and my wife," let's drop "my wife" out of …
Employees vs Staff - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Oct 24, 2017 · It feels more correct to say "This food was cooked by the staff of Eat Out restaurant" as opposed to "This food was cooked by the employees of Eat Out restaurant." I …
What is the correct way to write the statement "Employed from …
Thanks for the reply . If I had to rewrite the above statement in British English and considering that the employee is currently employed in the organization,will this statement be grammatically …
Employee with, for, at - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
May 18, 2018 · Which preposition would be more suited in this sentence: "I'm a new employee...", with, for or at? Is there any difference between "I'm a new employee for Company XXX" and …
single word requests - Name for newly joined employees - English ...
Feb 10, 2016 · Is there any word to indicate newly joined members in the company? I use New joinees New recruits Freshers Newly appointed. But I want the correct word.
Associates vs employees - English Language & Usage Stack …
Dec 13, 2014 · I've noted that some US companies call people working for them "associates," rather than "employees." (I've seen that term in less-than-stellar retail and fast-food chains) …
Simple Past vs. Present Perfect: "was" vs. "has been"
Jul 1, 2012 · Possible Duplicate: “Did it close” vs “Has it closed”? As a English non-native speaker it is difficult for me to understand when I must use present perfect or past simple
Which is correct: "There are not any employees" or "There is not …
Aug 9, 2010 · Sometimes I see two variants of following sentence: "there are not any employees" in the department "there is not any employee" in the department What is the correct sentence?