Practitioner vs Employer - What's the difference?
practitioner | employer |
A person who practices a profession or art, especially law or medicine.
*{{quote-magazine, date=2014-06-21, volume=411, issue=8892, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= One who does anything customarily or habitually.
(label) A sly or artful person.
* John Whitgift
A person, firm or other entity which pays for or hires the services of another person.
*
, title=(The Celebrity), chapter=10
, passage=The skipper Mr. Cooke had hired at Far Harbor was a God-fearing man with a luke warm interest in his new billet and employer , and had only been prevailed upon to take charge of the yacht after the offer of an emolument equal to half a year's sea pay of an ensign in the navy.}}
* , (1911-1977)
As nouns the difference between practitioner and employer
is that practitioner is a person who practices a profession or art, especially law or medicine while employer is a person, firm or other entity which pays for or hires the services of another person.practitioner
English
(wikipedia practitioner)Noun
(en noun)Magician’s brain, passage=The [Isaac] Newton that emerges from the [unpublished] manuscripts is far from the popular image of a rational practitioner of cold and pure reason. The architect of modern science was himself not very modern. He was obsessed with alchemy.}}
- the men of St. John's were cunning practitioners , in shaking off their Masters and Heads.
Derived terms
* general practitioner * nurse practitioner * pracademicReferences
*employer
English
Noun
(wikipedia employer) (en noun)- It might be said that it is the ideal of the employer to have production without employees and the ideal of the employee is to have income without work.