Yes, it is a noun, a business or person who employs others, i.e. provides jobs for them.
No, employer is a noun.
The possessive form of the noun employer is employer's.Example: My employer's response to my proposal was positive.
Employ is a verb. Employer and employee are nouns.
The noun forms of the verb to employ are employer, employment, and the gerund, employing.
The plural form for the noun employer is employers.
The concrete noun 'worker' is a form of the abstract noun work, a word for a concept.
The abstract noun forms of the verb to employ are employment and the gerund, employing.
Nouns that rhyme with hike:Bike: noun: short for bicycleDike: noun: a ditch/leveeMike: noun: short for microphoneNike: noun: goddess of victory in ancient GreecePike: noun: expressway/highwayStrike: noun: a stopping of work by a body of workers to force an employer to meet demandsTrike: noun: short for tricycleTyke: noun: small child
No, it is not. Employees is a plural noun (plural of employee, a person working for an employer).(*The possessives employee's or employees' can act like adjectives.)
The word recruit can be a noun and a verb. The noun form is a person who is enlisted for the army. The verb form means to enlist new members on behalf of an organisation or employer.
The word employs is a third person singular verb (employ, employs, employing, employed). The noun form for the verb employ is also employ, as in 'to be in someone's employ'. There is no plural form for this noun form. Other noun forms are employment (employments), employer (employers) and employee (employees).
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