Employ is a verb. Employer and employee are nouns.
Yes, if used as a verb. For example, "The store employee damaged the meat packaging with his finger."
Adjective forms for the verb to employ are employable and employed.
There are two forms of the word : EMPLOYEE (noun) - one who is employed EMPLOY (verb) - to use, or to have employed workers
No, it is not. Dismiss is a verb, which can mean release (a class, a subordinate) or ignore (a threat, a court case), or terminate, fire (an employee).
Something you do to your children. Something your boss does not do to you salary. Something you do to the roof in the club.
The abstract noun forms of the verb to employ are employment and the gerund, employing.
The word 'factor' is both a noun (factor, factors) and a verb (factor, factors, factoring, factored). Examples:noun: The main factor in the story is the storm and how everyone reacts to it.verb: You have to factor in the cost of benefits when you calculate what an employer pays an employee.
The verb of assignment is assign.Others are assigns, assigning and assigned, depending on the tense.Some example sentences are:"We will assign a new teacher"."She assigns the employee to the top floor"."They will be assigning us to a new squadron"."The new teacher was assigned to the worst class in the school".
No, the word 'pair' is a noun (pair, pairs) and a verb (pair, pairs, pairing, paired).Examples:A pair of stone lions guarded the entrance of the museum. (noun)A new employee is paired with a senior employee to learn the job. (verb)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. Example:A pair of stone lions guarded the entrance of the museum. They were very impressive.(the pronoun 'they' takes the place of the noun 'pair' in the second sentence)
employee management system bhaneko management of employee
employee management system bhaneko management of employee