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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
clerical
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a clerical/administrative error
▪ The applications forms were sent to the wrong addresses due to a clerical error.
secretarial/clerical/office work
▪ I have a background in secretarial work.
▪ She had done clerical work before she married.
the religious/clerical establishment
▪ His teachings were unacceptable to the religious establishment of the time.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
assistant
▪ This was considered to be due to the limited involvement of the officers and the clerical assistant in certain parts of the analysis.
▪ Apart from Summerchild and a clerical assistant, the Unit at the last count still consisted of one single member, Serafin herself.
▪ Adoption of this system has not only avoided the need to employ at least two clerical assistants.
▪ Serafin was proposing to involve the clerical assistant in the discussion?
▪ General administration and clerical work - officers and clerical assistant.
collar
▪ Opening the door a crack she saw a man in a clerical collar and a woman beside him.
▪ He certainly could not do it in a jacket, trousers, and shirt with a clerical collar.
▪ So the majority wore clerical collars and the ones who did not knew what they were doing.
▪ I noticed that he wore one of his own clerical collars round his neck.
▪ Otherwise, a dark suit, clerical collar, dark hat, raincoat, and they can give me a Military Cross.
error
▪ We apologise sincerely for this clerical error, and regret the confusion and inconvenience it has caused.
▪ Election officials maintain clerical errors accounted for most of those improper votes.
▪ Moreover what seems to have been a clerical error made even that original level low.
▪ The 15-page application was sent back to them because of a few clerical errors, which they corrected.
job
▪ Discrimination was highest for male, junior clerical jobs, management trainees and accountants, and lowest for female clerical jobs.
▪ And of course in many clerical jobs courage or openness is irrelevant.
▪ Discrimination was highest for male, junior clerical jobs, management trainees and accountants, and lowest for female clerical jobs.
▪ Many girls worked in minor clerical jobs and were encouraged to learn shorthand and typing skills at evening classes.
▪ He thinks that I could do better than just a clerical job.
▪ He held a series of undemanding clerical jobs.
▪ This week Salomon announced it was moving 750 clerical jobs to lower-cost Florida.
officer
▪ He now worked for the Water Board as a clerical officer.
staff
▪ In the former case, by employing civilian clerical staff a greater proportion of funds can be allocated for direct policing policies.
▪ Nine council members serve part time in Huntington Beach, sharing a clerical staff of three.
▪ One in 10 laboratories had to call on clerical staff to carry out important testing.
▪ Computers are belatedly replacing thousands of clerical staff and middle managers.
▪ Although manual and clerical staff may be replaced relatively easily, staff with special skills are hard to find.
▪ He had passed the examination to join the clerical staff of the Great Western Railway.
▪ The redundancies include 80 senior managers, 150 branch managers, 120 computer staff and 90 clerical staff, it claimed.
work
▪ From this evidence Marshall etal. also conclude that clerical work has not been proletarianized.
▪ The clerical work is handled by a national agency who services all the other groups in the company.
▪ The remaining 30% leave clerical work before they are 30.
▪ In other roles -- doing clerical work, handling phones -- her garb is less formal.
▪ Nor has he taken the trouble to go into details concerning the clerical work to be done.
▪ He shows a flair for clerical work, though.
▪ According to this study, clerical work is merely an occupational category through which men pass.
▪ In addition to the above, annuals are normally covered by standing orders, which eliminate repetitive clerical work.
worker
▪ They support the views of Goldthorpe and Lockwood that clerical workers are in an intermediate class between the working and service classes.
▪ Custodians, clerical workers, food handlers, professors.
▪ Interestingly, however, clerical workers show least sociability in this respect.
▪ To help carry out the community approach, detectives, officers, meter monitors, and clerical workers began meeting in teams.
▪ The rejection of the proletarianization theory for clerical workers by Marshall etal. must, however, be regarded with some caution.
▪ In their own sample, a large majority of clerical workers, 70%, were female.
▪ Furthermore, they found that female clerical workers were much less likely to achieve promotion than their male counterparts.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
clerical staff
▪ The work you'll do is mainly clerical.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Belliustin called upon the tsar to circumvent the ecclesiastical hierarchy and breathe life into the clerical estate.
▪ Discrimination was highest for male, junior clerical jobs, management trainees and accountants, and lowest for female clerical jobs.
▪ Essential to his effort was the restoration of a vigorous and self-conscious clerical caste.
▪ Nine council members serve part time in Huntington Beach, sharing a clerical staff of three.
▪ Nothing would ever be said, but the activity would be seen as part of a clerical decline.
▪ Otherwise the key areas of debt counselling and clerical support can not continue adequately.
▪ The clergy, however, preferred to discuss these matters in provincial clerical synods where they governed the procedures and priorities.
▪ Then down to the clerical job in City Hall for more learning.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Clerical

Clerical \Cler"ic*al\, a. [LL. clericalis. See Clerk.]

  1. Of or pertaining to the clergy; suitable for the clergy. ``A clerical education.''
    --Burke.

  2. Of or relating to a clerk or copyist, or to writing. ``Clerical work.''
    --E. Everett.

  3. characteristic of the work performed by a clerk, secretary, or copyist, or suitable to be performed by a clerk. ``Clerical staff.''

    A clerical error, an error made in copying or writing.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
clerical

1590s, "pertaining to the clergy," from cleric + -al (1), or from French clérical, from Old French clerigal "learned," from Latin clericalis, from clericus (see cleric). Meaning "pertaining to clerks" is from 1798.

Wiktionary
clerical

a. 1 of or relating to clerks or their work 2 of or relating to the clergy n. A member of the clergy.

WordNet
clerical
  1. adj. of or relating to clerks; "clerical work"

  2. of or relating to the clergy; "clerical collar"

  3. appropriate for or engaged in office work; "clerical skills"; "a clerical job"; "the clerical staff"

Wikipedia
Clerical

Clerical may refer to:

  • Pertaining to the clergy
  • Pertaining to a clerical worker
  • Clerical script, a style of Chinese calligraphy
  • Clerical People's Party

Usage examples of "clerical".

He thought for a moment of making his imaginary clerical friend a native of Fardles, in order to give him a special delight in things that came from there, but that was too risky.

Castelletti and Scala, who had closed the investigations in Bellagio with the interrogation of Monsignor Jean-Bernard Dalbouse, French-born parish priest of the Church of Santa Chiara, and his staff, clerical and laypeople alike.

As he opened the door, the Milesian features of Father McShane presented themselves, and from their centre proceeded the clerical benediction in Irish-sounding Latin, Pax vobiscum!

Carson Newburgh had kept him on for his clerical skills, and somehow he had become part of the inner circle, gradually assuming greater and greater responsibilities and discharging them without fault.

Eight Young Octobrists from Pskov, three boys and five girls ranging in age from eight to ten, and three clerical employees, all men who worked directly for the Politburo, were laid out in polished birchwood coffins, surrounded by a sea of flowers.

The heavy, gold-enamelled openwork frame stood out from the white wall, with the painting of the man in his dark clerical attire appearing to be painted on the wall itself, the whole giving the impression of three dimensions.

Traywicke Conyers, general manager of the Old Royal Maison New Orleans, and told him the sky was the limit, presuming, of course, the usual clerical discount.

The four hundred of the majority belonged by thirds to three parties, the Legitimist party, the Orleanist party, the Bonapartist party, and in a body to the Clerical party.

Burton first came to us she could not follow any occupation, but after the obsessing spirits were removed she was able to take a clerical position in a large commercial house.

The vicars choral did not hang upon his words as they had been wont to do, and the minor canons smiled in return to his smile less obsequiously when they met him in the clerical circles of Barchester.

With a unanimity which seems almost incomprehensible, and for a long time was not understood by historians, the urban agglomerations, down to the smallest burgs, began to shake off the yoke of their worldly and clerical lords.

And under the new defensors, whether laic or clerical, the citizens conquered full self-jurisdiction and self-administration for their folkmotes.

Anton jerked Tarl back behind him and hurriedly incanted another clerical spell.

The aristocracy of Barchester consisted chiefly of clerical dignitaries, bishops, deans, prebendaries, and such like: on them and theirs it was not probable that anything said by Sir Roger would have much effect.

The writing on the scrolls was clerical in nature, strange to her eyes.