jobber
mixtral-playground
A person wearing a tool belt and holding a theatrical mask on a stage with curtains in the background.
The image uses a visual cue of a person wearing a tool belt, which is commonly associated with manual labor and working by the job. The person is also shown holding a theatrical mask, representing the secondary definition of an actor temporarily employed for a specific role in a touring company. The use of a tool belt and mask together create a unique and memorable image that is easy to connect with the word's meaning. The background scenery of a stage with curtains adds to the visual interest and makes the image more engaging. The style is realistic with a touch of theatricality.
- noun — jobbers
- One who works by the job (i.e. paid per individual piece of work) and/or recruits other people for such work.
- In the Mills there existed a usage under which a worker was first appointed as a Cleaner then an Oiler and thereafter promoted as a Jobber.
- An actor temporarily employed for a specific role, often in a touring company.
- Jobbers are used as needed.
- A promoter or broker of stocks for investment.
- An act to restrain the number and ill practice of brokers and stock jobbers: 8 & 9 Wm. 3, ch. 32 (1697) [legislation of English parliament
- An intermediary who buys and sells merchandise.
- We will say "I would rather be an expressman hauling tobacco, cigarettes, et cetera, than be a jobber of such commodities," especially in the city of Boston at the present writing.
- It is usually best to choose a book jobber to handle the bulk of a library's purchases.
- A performer whose primary role is to lose to established talent.
- A thing (often used in a vague way to refer to something the name of which one cannot recall).
- One who works by the job (i.e. paid per individual piece of work) and/or recruits other people for such work.
Derived from job