noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
congressional
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Inc., meeting with industry CEOs and other attorneys and serving as a resource for congressional staffers and reporters.
■ VERB
go
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Slipshod administration caused several staffers to go for months without receiving their salaries, while running up thousands of dollars in advances.
say
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She was asked to do the work, Brezzo said , because museum staffers who could have were busy with other assignments.
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She said Republican staffers earlier this week broke into Democrats' computer systems, destroying programs and documents worth thousands of dollars.
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He said no Republican staffers had reviewed them as yet.
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He also said he would order staffers to intensify efforts to find more wells.
work
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Congressional staffers who want to work on their bosses' campaigns must use vacation time.
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Ten staffers work directly for the Dodgers in planning community relations and coordinating this year's team-wide efforts.
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Me, and all the other lawyers, economists, and staffers who would work in the marble palaces.
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Several dozen staffers worked in administration and finance, raising the ever-growing sums needed to keep the machine running.
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Pampered technical and content staffers may resist working anywhere other than near their favorite coffee shops or blues clubs.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
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He had been a staffer in George Bush's administration.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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A secretariat staffer involved with the latter says multinational industry should police itself.
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And so what if the first lady arranged to have the travel staffers fired?
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Buchanan has only $ 2 million in the bank and only two paid campaign staffers in South Carolina.
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Cruz also said Muni planned to hire at least 12 additional safety staffers, bringing the total to 72.
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His openness is counter-cultural in these times of limited access, control-freak staffers, and ubiquitous security details.
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Polgar was not the only committee staffer with glaring conflicts of interest.
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Some staffers have been trained to take on additional law-enforcement roles, Diller says.
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Young staffers are bucking the boss and wearing suits on casual Fridays.