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Discover LudwigThe phrase "am employable" is not correct in standard written English.
It can be used in contexts where someone is stating their ability to be hired or to find employment, but it requires a subject to be grammatically correct.
Example: "I believe I am employable due to my skills and experience."
Alternatives: "I can be hired" or "I am suitable for employment."
Dictionary
am employable
noun
A person who is fit for employment.
Exact(1)
With great relief I am employable in my home country and I do weekends on a radio station now in Perth to maintain my skill set and maybe, if my mother walks again soon, I will return in 2015 to my expatriate life.
Similar(59)
And it's not just employers, students are asking to be trained to be employable too.
Be employable.
Where else would he even be employable?
"Adding to skills through the right master's programme really makes the difference between being employable and not being employable".
"You're not going to be employable," the teacher warned.
To begin with, it simply meant being employable.
As technology progresses and disrupts more jobs, more workers will be employable only at lower wages.
A cross piston press might also be employable for mechanical activation.
It is true that, in some AFDC families, there may be no person who is employable.
Science is of such economic value, you are always going to be employable".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com