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cashier
1[ka-sheer]
noun
an employee, as in a market or department store, who collects payments for customer purchases.
an executive who has charge of money, especially one who superintends monetary transactions, as in a bank.
an employee of a business establishment who keeps a record of financial transactions.
cashier
2[ka-sheer]
verb (used with object)
to dismiss (a military officer) from service, especially with disgrace.
to discard; reject.
cashier
1/ kæˈʃɪə /
noun
a person responsible for receiving payments for goods, services, etc, as in a shop
Also called: teller. an employee of a bank responsible for receiving deposits, cashing cheques, and other financial transactions; bank clerk
any person responsible for handling cash or maintaining records of its receipt and disbursement
cashier
2/ kæˈʃɪə /
verb
to dismiss with dishonour, esp from the armed forces
rare, to put away or discard; reject
Word History and Origins
Origin of cashier1
Word History and Origins
Origin of cashier1
Origin of cashier2
Example Sentences
His partner, who asked not to be named for fear of retaliation, had worked the night before as a cashier at a liquor store.
Applying for a part-time cashier job near her dismal D.C. apartment, Rebecca No. 1 mulls, “Inside the market, I remind myself I am a person. I have an age, a birthday, an address.”
It’s a strange sight: a millionaire playacting as a cashier in an industry where many workers can’t afford rent.
The Jail Café set tables and chairs in “cells” for patrons served by waiters wearing trustee uniforms, presided over by a cashier dressed as a warden.
"We have had many thousands of responses and lots of interest and engagement from young people too," said Victoria Cleland the Bank's chief cashier.
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