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Employed Employ ɪmˈplɔɪ Company People Extra Examples Time

Word3 employ
WordType (verb)
Phonetic /ɪmˈplɔɪ/ /ɪmˈplɔɪ/
Example
  • how many people does the company employ?
  • his company currently employs 135 workers in total.
  • we employ 16 full-time staff.
  • for the past three years he has been employed as a firefighter.
Sound Online sound. https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/media/english/us_pron/e/emp/emplo/employ__us_4.mp3
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Content

employ

(verb)/ɪmˈplɔɪ/ /ɪmˈplɔɪ/

    Verb Forms

  1. to give somebody a job to do for payment
    • SEE ALSO self-employed
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/self-employed
    • How many people does the company employ?
    • His company currently employs 135 workers in total.
    • We employ 16 full-time staff.
    • For the past three years he has been employed as a firefighter.
    • Twenty eight per cent of the workforce is employed in agriculture.
    • From 1510 he was employed on projects for the emperor.
    • A number of people have been employed to deal with the backlog of work.

    Extra Examples

    • By 1960 the arms industry directly employed 3.5 million people.
    • Mark is currently employed as a Professor of Linguistics.
    • The army has far more junior officers than it can usefully employ.
    • Those not gainfully employed are dependent on their savings.
  2. to use something such as a skill, method, etc. for a particular purpose
    • to employ a technique/strategy/tactic
    • He criticized the repressive methods employed by the country's government.
    • The police had to employ force to enter the building.
    • Steel is employed for the lightweight frame.
    • She employs fiction as a means to explore current social theories.
    • This phrase is routinely employed to describe the president's style of government.

    Extra Examples

    • the tactics employed by the police
    • teaching that actively employs computers in innovative and fruitful ways
    • When properly employed, non-lethal weapons will save lives.
    • The safety net is an image commonly employed in everyday life.
    • Some teachers employ more traditional methods.
    • Self-checkout terminals are increasingly employed by retailers.
  3. if a person or their time is employed in doing something, the person spends time doing that thing
    • She was employed in making a list of all the jobs to be done.

    Extra Examples

    • Will and Joe were busily employed in clearing out all the furniture.
    • Your time would be better employed doing something else.
    • You'd be far better employed taking care of your own affairs.

    Word Origin

    • late Middle English (formerly also as imploy): from Old French employer, based on Latin implicari ‘be involved in or attached to’, passive form of implicare, from in- ‘in’ + plicare ‘to fold’. In the 16th and 17th cent. the word also had the senses ‘enfold, entangle’ and ‘imply’, derived directly from Latin; compare with implicate.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

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