different between contractor vs employees
contractor
English
Etymology
[16th century] Borrowed from Late Latin contractor, from Latin contract-, stem of contractus + -tor.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?k?n?t?æk.t?(?)/
Noun
contractor (plural contractors)
- A person or company that builds or improves buildings.
- A person or company that performs specific tasks like electrical or plumbing work in construction projects.
- A person or company hired to maintain existing facilities like air conditioning systems, groundskeeping, etc.
- A person hired to do a job on a business contract, as opposed to a permanent employee.
- 1994, Scott Adams, Dilbert:
- It looks like you're off to a three-hour staff meeting that doesn't apply to me. I'm glad I'm a highly-paid contractor. I'll be increasing my skills while you fight to get oxygen to your brains.
- 1994, Scott Adams, Dilbert:
Translations
See also
- contract
contractor From the web:
- what contractors hate about clients
- what contractors do
- what contractor is building the wall
- what contractor did christina sleep with
- what contractors are needed to build a house
- what contractors are building the border wall
- what contractor was christina dating
- what contractor did christina date
employees
English
Noun
employees
- plural of employee
employees From the web:
- what employees want
- what employees are exempt from overtime
- what employees value most
- what employees are eligible for ffcra
- what employees want from employers
- what employees look for in a company
- what employees are covered under the ffcra
- what employees want in a leader
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