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  1. Dictionary
    clerk
    /klɑːk/

    noun

    • 1. a person employed in an office or bank to keep records, accounts, and undertake other routine administrative duties: "a bank clerk"
    • 2. a receptionist in a hotel: North American "she approached the desk and the clerk looked down at her"

    verb

    • 1. work as a clerk: North American "eleven of those who left college this year are clerking in auction stores"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

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  3. Learn the meaning of clerk as a noun and a verb, with usage examples and related words. Find out how to pronounce clerk and translate it in different languages.

  4. : an official responsible (as to a government agency) for correspondence, records, and accounts and vested with specified powers or authority (as to issue writs as ordered by a court) city clerk. b. : one employed to keep records or accounts or to perform general office work. a bank clerk. c. : one who works at a sales or service counter.

  5. Clerk definition: a person employed, as in an office, to keep records, file, type, or perform other general office tasks.. See examples of CLERK used in a sentence.

  6. Learn the meaning of clerk as a noun and a verb, with examples of usage and synonyms. Find out the different types of clerks in office, store, hotel and law contexts.

  7. A clerk is an office worker who does various paper work and often keeps accounts of money or other details. An office clerk might answer the phone, file papers, or organize computer records. A clerical worker is one kind of clerk, and another is the person behind a counter at a store who rings up sales on a cash register.

  8. A clerk is a person who works in an office, bank, or law court and whose job is to look after the records or accounts. Learn more about the word origin, pronunciation, synonyms, and examples of 'clerk' in different contexts.

  9. A clerk is a person who works in an office, a court, a store, or a hotel, etc. The word comes from Latin clēricus, meaning belonging to the clergy, and has different pronunciations in American and British English.