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Colleague. colleague, co-worker, collaborator
A "colleague" is one with whom you work or associate with in an enterprise (as in education or law).
Yes it is. Colleague means: A fellow member of a profession, staff, academic faculty or other organization; an associate. So substituting the definition for the work colleague in "fellow colleague" gives you: "fellow fellow member of a profession, staff, academic faculty or other organization; an associate".
A work partnener is also a colegue
A 'colleague', is someone who is in the same profession as you (meaning somebody who does the same kind of work you do, or who had to receive the same type of education as you as a job requirement), or someone you work with (usually meaning somebody who has the same general status as you, not your boss, or if you are the boss, a partner would be your colleague but you probably wouldn't use that term to refer to one of your employees), or somebody who goes to the same school as you, or someone who is in the same organization as you.
If you feel uncomfortable with it go up and tell your colleague.. Or it just means that he/she fancy you or just has a problem with you !
yes, yes i do help my colleague during work
Colleague. colleague, co-worker, collaborator
Not necessarily. A colleague is someone you work with; and assistant is someone who works for you.
colleague
Contact
A Colleague is someone that you work with directly or indirectly at the same company.
Another word for work partner is colleague.
The phrase "fellow colleague" is redundant, as both "fellow" and "colleague" convey a similar meaning of someone who works with you in the same profession or organization. You can simply use "colleague" to refer to someone you work with.
A co-worker, a peer or a colleague.
A notice of resignation
Work it out! Be adult about it and talk to this person and make amends.