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New2grammar Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

job titles

0What do you call a person who fixes your furnace? Mechanic or plumber02br
02br
00What do you call a person who fixes/services your home air-conditioner? Mechanic or technician02br
02br
00What do you call a person who fixes your phone line? Technician or utility worker02br
02br
00Thanks in advance.0-
  

Top answer

0 None of them are set in stone and are going to be different from place to place and company to company. 0-

  • 0 None of them are set in stone and are going to be different from place to place and company to company.
  • 0-
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5 Answers
0
0 None of them are set in stone and are going to be different from place to place and company to company. If you like you can call them all "man":01ul
    01li
  • 00The central heating man02li
  • 01li
  • 00The air conditioning man02li
  • 01li
  • 00The telephone man02li
  • 02ul
00You can substitute "01i00man02i00" with "
0
0Huevos, I love your suggestion. Makes my life easy. But just to be sure, please check if the following are OK to you.02br
02br
00The person who changed my bathtub, bathtub man?02br
00The furnace man?02br
00The carpet man?02br
00The light man?02br
00The door man02br
00The cabinet man0-
0
0 Saying "man" is really colloquial and should be avoided if the proper job title is obvious. (Lots of jobs have "man" in their official title, milkman, rag and bone man, etc).01blockquote
01cite10New2grammar12cite10The door man12blockquote
10 Doorman is a person that stands outside a disco or nightclub and controls entry, but, cont
0
0 Bath fitter02br
00central heating engineer02br
00carpet fitter02br
00electrician02br
00Carpenter should cover the last two0-

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