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staffer

[ UK /stˈæfɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈstæfɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. an employee who is a member of a staff of workers (especially a member of the staff that works for the President of the United States)

How To Use staffer In A Sentence

  • Human-resources staffers walk a fine line: employees see them as stooges for management, and management views them as annoying do-gooders representing employees.
  • The section was removed, the SEC said in a filing on April 18, 2011, because the term investment banking could have been read as applying to "syndicate" staffers, who routinely make decisions on how to allocate IPOs to firms' clients. Rule to Prevent Abuse of IPOs Is Delayed
  • Just remember, training is never a bad idea, and you can use a new hire as an excuse to refresh the skills of longstanding staffers, too.
  • Connie staffer ID'ed as Williams' diplomacy adviso... Archive 2006-11-01
  • So the idea that even one Planned Parenthood staffer (by definition … a “pro-choicer”) is perfectly okay with funding even one abortion, specifically to kill a black child — well, we are unilaterally and unequivocally against that. ProWomanProLife » On “moral hygiene”
  • Meanwhile, in this controversy, it is ex-ministers and their staffers who have been depoliticised.
  • So if he sees staffers putting in lengthy hours at the office, he doesn't hesitate to take steps to make sure their home lives remain in balance.
  • She convinced Continental's senior executives to take ownership of important agencies and corporations in assigned territories, and to join marketing staffers on sales calls and at the twice-yearly customer confabs.
  • In mid-May, for example, he told the Labor Ministry to look into ways to loosen up restrictions that make it hard for companies to fire workers and hire temp staffers as replacements.
  • In the April 6 issue there appears an article under the byline of staffer Handrie Basson.
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