dictionnaire Polonais - Anglais

język polski - English

zatrudnieni Anglais:

1. employed


Six people applied for the job, but none of them were employed.
The ladies are looking after the children whose parents are employed in factories during the daytime.
The law now requires women to be employed on equal terms with men.
While employed at the bank, he taught economics at college.
She employed a private detective to keep a watch on her husband.
I'm employed.
As he was an honest man, I employed him.
I myself have, before becoming employed by this company, twice spoken bluntly to the people at the top.
The walking stick serves the purpose of an advertisement that the bearer's hands are employed otherwise than in useful effort, and it therefore has utility as an evidence of leisure.
Roger Ascham one day paying a visit to the amiable but unfortunate Lady Jane Grey found her employed in reading Plato while the rest of the family were engaged in a hunting party in the park.
An effective writer is one who knows what sort of words should be employed in any specific context.
At an Indian wedding at the Phillipine islands the bride retired from the company in order to go down to the river to wash her feet. As she was thus employed an alligator seized her.
Several young engineers were employed and were devoted to developing a new computer.
For the past three years he has been employed as a firefighter.
True, even a lowly obligator like the ones Tresting employed could serve as such witness.

2. workforce


The recent crisis has thinned our workforce significantly.
China's workforce will continue to grow
They reduced the workforce of this factory by 50%.
How much of the American workforce has experienced bullying at work? Was it:
companies are honoured for their commitments to their workforce
This company has a workforce of 1000.
We can only maintain a competitive edge if our workforce has the right training.
The key question is how to engage workforce to work for us
Women now represent almost 50% of the workforce.
Management has threatened to lock out the workforce if they do not accept the proposed changes.
Forty percent of the workforce are white-collar workers, most of whom have some of the most tedious and idiotic jobs ever concocted.

3. in work



4. employees


Japanese companies generally provide their employees with uniforms.
Do you have any employees who speak Japanese?
They are employees
For some companies their treatment of their employees or clients at any given time could affect their share prices and so inevitably have a great influence on the company’s success or failure.
In some companies, employees use paid holidays for their summer vacations.
I had to make up for three other employees, who were laid off yesterday.
It goes back, Personnel Officer Paula Grayson told us, to the way many employers used to pay their employees a hundred years ago.
Whenever he adopts a new business strategy, his employees fear for their jobs.
Japan has an economy that is supported by hard-working company employees in big cities.
This year's freshly inducted employees are, to a man, lacking in concentration, and their sloppy work leaves me speechless.
Ability is the only factor considered in promoting employees.
If you are a potential employee then you should be aware of what the company stands for and how it treats its employees before attending an interview.
I heard that Isezaki city decided to ban beards for male city employees starting June 19. It's the complete opposite of the Taliban laws imposing the wearing of beards.
Businesses often have a list of 5-10 'mission statements' featured in their brochures, on their websites or hanging in their office detailing the values they hold as a form of communication to their employees, their clients and the public.
If you try to defend the seniority-based corporate escalator these days all you'll get is flak from younger employees.

5. hired


She hired him.
Tom was hired to supervise the production of Mary's music video.
Can you confirm that he was hired?
Tom was killed by a hired assassin.
The company hired a temporary office assistant.
The supermarket hired many part-timers.
When we started out in 2008, we wrote down a list of people that we wanted to hire, then went out and hired them.
I hired a private tutor to help me with math homework.
If the plant is completed next year, a new production manager will have to be hired.
I'm making about four times as much myself as when I first hired Tony.
Tony realized that if he hired another crew, got more customers and did the job quicker and sloppier, he could make more money.
but they'd simply hired a bunch of drunks.
The producers hired a team of writers just to patch up the show's continuity, lest they get letters from...those people.
Although many pay lip service to the idea of affirmative action, in reality, very few minorities get hired.
Orchestras hired more men than women.