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Definition of clerk verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

clerk

verb
 
/klɑːk/
 
/klɜːrk/
[intransitive] (North American English)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they clerk
 
/klɑːk/
 
/klɜːrk/
he / she / it clerks
 
/klɑːks/
 
/klɜːrks/
past simple clerked
 
/klɑːkt/
 
/klɜːrkt/
past participle clerked
 
/klɑːkt/
 
/klɜːrkt/
-ing form clerking
 
/ˈklɑːkɪŋ/
 
/ˈklɜːrkɪŋ/
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  1. to work as a clerk
    • a clerking job
    Word OriginOld English cleric, clerc (in the sense ‘ordained minister, literate person’), from ecclesiastical Latin clericus ‘clergyman’, from Greek klērikos ‘belonging to the Christian clergy’, from klēros ‘lot, heritage’ (Acts 1:26); reinforced by Old French clerc, from the same source. Sense (1) dates from the early 16th cent.
See clerk in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
alloy
noun
 
 
From the Topic
Physics and chemistry
C2
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