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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a junior guy" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to someone who is relatively new or inexperienced in a particular role or organization, often in a professional context.
Example: "In our team, we have a junior guy who is still learning the ropes but shows great potential."
Alternatives: "a junior employee" or "a novice team member."
Exact(3)
"Usually a junior guy will get stuck with that assignment," said Sgt. Grant Arthur of the United States Park Police, which patrols the area.
Now a junior guy who knows nothing and isn't allowed to make decisions sends it to head office who compute it – and say no".
I had back-to-back meetings scheduled with investment bankers, and if the Nasdaq was down, only a junior guy would show up; when it bounced back, the top level people would attend.
Similar(53)
Hindery described the Cablevision official who arrived at YES's Manhattan office as a "very junior guy" who did not appear to know that YES had announced its agreement with Time Warner one week earlier.
I sure hope this is just a lower level junior guy getting a little excited and not a wholesale, nefarious plan for online shilling.
The stapler story was written by some junior guy from a newswire.
Andrew Straub, chief executive of Renewal Property Services, a business in Jenison, Mich., that provides painting and cleaning services for property management companies and colleges: "I would have taken a chance on the right junior guy.
He has only about $140, so the bad guys sell him "a junior gun for a junior man".
A junior sales guy would not have gotten the meetings.
As long as the junior guy projects confidence, professionalism and problem-solving skills, he'll get results".
Junior guy is more nervous about the downside.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com