katiplik et

listen to the pronunciation of katiplik et
Türkçe - İngilizce
{f} clerk
A facilitator of a Quaker meeting for business affairs
To act as a clerk, to perform the duties or functions of a clerk

The law school graduate clerked for the supreme court judge for the summer.

{n} a clergyman, scholar, writer, officer
An assistant in a shop or store
A scholar Hence, beau-clerc (See above, Clerical Titles ) “All the clerks, I mean the learned ones, in Christian kingdoms, Have their free voices ” Shakespeare: Henry VIII , ii 2 St Nicholas's Clerks Thieves An equivoque on the word Nick “I think there came prancing down the hill a couple of St Nicholas's clerks ”- Rowley: Match at Midnight, 1633 Clerk-ale and Church-ale Mr Douce says the word “ale” is used in such composite words as bride-ale, clerk-ale, church-ale, lamb-ale, Midsummer-ale, Scot-ale, Whitsun-ale, etc , for revel or feast, ale being the chief liquor given “The multitude call Church-ale Sunday their revelyng day, which day is spent in bulbeatings, bearbeating, dicying, and drunkenness ”- W Kethe (1570) Clerkenwell (London) means the Clerks'-well, where the parish clerks of London used to assemble yearly to play some sacred piece
The Chief Executive Officer of any Grove This person is elected from the Grove (or, where there is a nest, from the nest) and is the main spokesperson, record keeper, correspondent, etc , for the Grove The Clerk serves for a year and a day, and may serve up to three terms consecutively
A man who could read; a scholar; a learned person; a man of letters
A clerk is someone who works in a store. = sales clerk
Officer of court who files pleadings, motions, judgments, etc , issues process, and keeps records of court proceedings A law clerk assists an attorney or judge with legal research, brief writing, and other legal tasks Is commonly a recent law school graduate or law student
The person employed by the principal auctioneer or auction firm to record what is sold and to whom and for what price
an employee who performs clerical work (e g , keeps records or accounts)
To clerk means to work as a clerk. Gene clerked at the auction. to work as a clerk
One who occupationally works with records, accounts, letters, etc.; an office worker
keeps records or accounts work as a clerk, as in the legal business
An employee of a brokerage house who transfers orders and information between stockbrokers in an office and floor brokers at a stock exchange <top>
the timekeeper of the debate
CDS: The software that provides an interface between client applications and CDS servers The clerk receives a request from an application, sends the request to a CDS server, and returns any resulting information to the application The clerk saves (caches) the results of lookups so that it does not have to repeatedly go to a CDS server for the same information DTS: A software component that synchronizes the clock for its client system by requesting time values from servers, computing a new time from the values, and supplying the computed time to client applications
A clergyman or ecclesiastic
A parish officer, being a layman who leads in reading the responses of the Episcopal church service, and otherwise assists in it