Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Clerical. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Clerical Quotes And Sayings by 98 Authors including Ciara Renee,William J. Brennan,Tarja Moles,Denzel Washington,Laurie Metcalf for you to enjoy and share.
My mother is a Senior Casualty Claims Specialist I, which in layman's terms means the head insurance adjuster!
Clerks get into the damnedest wrangles
which is the way they help me.
Lentokonesuihkuturbiinimoottoriapumekaanikkoaliupseerioppilas (technical warrant officer trainee specialised in aircraft jet engines)
In any profession it gets to be a grind.
I was an office secretary for a long time. A good secretary.
I've been an engineer, barman, skip lorry driver, coalman, boat window manufacturer, contract grass cutter and builder.
Job, requiring intellectual ability and acuity
A professional sex therapist." Gabe moved out into the hall. "Guess I should show some respect. They do say it's the oldest profession. No, wait, maybe I've got that mixed up with another line of work.
I am the menial, at the beck and squawk of any feathered worthy who wants service.
When I was young I had an apprenticeship as an engineer.
I must like my profession, since I can hardly distinguish myself from it.
A lot of white-collar work requires less of the routine, rule-based, what we might call algorithmic set of capabilities, and more of the harder-to-outsource, harder-to-automate, non-routine, creative, juristic - as the scholars call it - abilities.
Agents of disruption, subversion, sabotage and disinformation tunnelers and smugglers, listeners and forgers, trainers and recruiters and talent spotters and couriers and watchers and seducers, assassins and balloonists, lip readers and disguise artists.
I am a mechanical techie. I can build things with my hands.
The only honourable work my parents knew was blue-collar. But while my father Robert ran a pawnbroker's shop, and my mother was a waitress, I moved into a middle-class world with a level of security they never knew.
This job is so...so...I can't even begin to describe it."
Try living it on a daily basis.
I am an industry.
My dad was a telegraph operator for the Cotton Belt Railroad. He worked seven nights a week from 4 until midnight, no vacation.
I was a librarian.
Oh, I thought that this day and age you maybe would be known as bovine custodial officers.
I was training to be an electrician. I suppose I got wired the wrong way round somewhere along the line.
You work for God Incorporated.
I did quite a lot of menial jobs. I was a waiter, an inventory clerk touring round properties listing cups and saucers, and a laserquest marshal.
There is no nobler profession, nor no greater calling, than to be among those unheralded many who gave and give their lives to the preservation of human knowledge, passed with commitment and care from one generation to the next.
The one profession where you can gain great eminence without ever being right.
My line of work makes you aware of the fragility of life. You can get up in the morning, eat your cornflakes, blow-dry your hair, go to work and end up dead.
What kind of FBI agent are you?
I work hard in social work, public relations, and raising the Grimaldi heirs.
Careers are funny things. They begin mysteriously and, just as mysteriously, they can end.
My chief job is to constantly stir or rekindle the curiosity of people that gets driven out by bureaucracy and formal schooling systems.
Those professions which are not so much involved in life itself as concerned with abstract truths are the most dangerous for the young man whose principles are not yet firm and whose convictions are not yet strong and unshakeable.
And an apprenticeship to whatever gadgetry is useful in a technical world
My mum is a school teacher and my dad is an electrician.
I am a doctor - it's a profession that may be considered a special mission, a devotion. It calls for involvement, respect and willingness to help all other people.
A vocation is born to us all; happily most of us meet promptly our twin,
occupation.
lab workers as subjects.
Being a child is in itself a profession.
The humblest occupation has in it materials of discipline for the highest heaven.
The bourgeoisie has stripped of its halo every occupation hitherto honoured and looked up to with reverent awe. It has converted the physician, the lawyer, the priest, the poet, the man of science, into its paid wage labourers.
It is not the most pleasant employment to spend eight hours a day in a counting house.
It is a full-time job to cope with alien elements from both interpersonal sources and societal influences.
psychologist Timothy
Sounds like a thankless job.
Sometimes the most important ones are.
Your career will be a painful one. I divine something in you which offends the vulgar.
I could be one if I wanted to, I'm just way too overqualified for a job that simple.
Your favorite occupation? Travel in contested territory. Hard-working writing and reading when safely home, in the knowledge that an amusing friend is later coming to dinner.
In any other job, they're truck drivers. In show-biz, they're Transportation Captains.
What does an administrative assistant do? I wondered.
The entry-level job...is on its way to becoming an antiquity.
It turns out you have to be an apprentice in this world.
I call them associates; I don't like the word 'employee.'
My profession is called record production.
A technician is a man who understands everything about his job except its ultimate purpose and its place in the order of the universe.
Electricians that like good health avoid the known biologically toxic very high powered electrical utility jobs.
I often think about the class differences involved in "jobs" vs. "careers."
I'm an entertainer in the military-entertainment complex.
A quiet worker but a very productive one and a great one for the state of Georgia.
He looked like an accountant or a serial-killer type. Definitely one of the service industries.
I was hired as a penciler.
instructor - and
Each position has its corresponding duties.
I thought I might be a band instructor, someone who plays all the instruments and teaches others.
required position
I've been an assistant to a folklorist and a teacher. There may or may not have been some sandwich-making at a certain sub chain in my past as well.
I came from a farming background, and my career was teaching.
If you could arrange to avoid that routine job-world, you were an intellectual or an artist. Too restless, tremorous, agitated, too mad to sit at a desk eight hours a day, you needed an institution - a higher institution.
Oh, my career. What career? I'm over 40.
A priest? I said.
A monk or some such. One of those worker guys. Liberation theowhateveritis.
Theologian, said the other.
One of those guys who thinks that Jesus was on welfare.
I look after people.
These days I'm pretty much a businessman.
Firefighter is one of the few jobs kind enough to warn me away by containing two words I'm not interested in, unlike the deceptive bookkeeper.
Writing is a funny business. You sit in your room and listen to voices and write everything down. What kind of a profession is that?
what secular avocation on earth was there for a young man (whose friends could not get him an 'appointment') which was at once gentlemanly, lucrative, and to be followed without special knowledge?
I was a nursemaid. And it was pretty boring.
The tougher the job, the greater the reward.
Your profession is not what brings home your weekly paycheck, your profession is what you're put here on earth to do, with such passion and such intensity that it becomes spiritual in calling.
Writing that's not working for a living.
Why had I entered this profession? I could have gone in for something easier and gentler - like coalmining or lumberjacking.
My husband is a general's chauffeur somewhere in France.
Just advertising departments with legs and high heels.
People need to know what their jobs are.
Sorry, I was a philosophy major, so nutjob cultist is the only job I can hold.
I'm not really a career person; I'm a gardener, basically.
I was a government employee in the morning and a writer in the evening.
A diligent Scholer, and the Master's paid.
[A diligent scholar, and the master's paid.]
When people on airplanes ask me what I do, I used to say I was a physicist, which ended the discussion. I once said I was a cosmologist, but they started asking me about makeup, and the title 'astronomer' gets confused with astrologer. Now I say I make maps.
I was a blueberry picker, bindery worker, bookstore clerk and later manager, and a Realtor.
except for military lawyers and legal aid/public defenders, who reported the highest job satisfaction.106
The spread of computers and the Internet will put jobs in two categories. People who tell computers what to do, and people who are told by computers what to do.
Nah. I'm a consultant, of course. Everyone's favorite nondescript yet well-paid white-collar job.
I'm a job creator.
Life: my favorite occupation.
By profession an observer of tones and gestures,
One of those librarians who rules the stacks with an intimidating scowl, whispers quiet sharply enough to lacerate the tender inner tissues of the ear, and will pursue an overdue-book fine with the ferocity of a rabid ferret.
I don't really think in career terms.
My mother is an office manager, my father a professor of economics and financial planner.
Our specific profession serves a sacred purpose.
My father was an accountant and his father was a typographer.
Being a secretary was considered a very good job in those days.
Mr. Franz, I think careers are a 20th century invention and I don't want one.