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Dictionary
bookkeeper
noun
A person responsible for keeping records or documents, such as of a business.
synonyms
Exact(60)
Each Angel pays 10p a week into a collective kitty which is looked after by a committee with a treasurer, secretary, and bookkeeper.
Young Stanley went to Harvard and on his return at the age of 21 became bookkeeper, salesman and much else besides.
Olive Ann Mellor studied bookkeeping and stenography at a secretarial and business school in Wichita and then worked as a bookkeeper for an electrical supply and contracting firm in Augusta, Kan.
Four years later William J. Carlton hired James Walter Thompson, age 20, as a bookkeeper.
The younger Raddall was briefly employed as a wireless operator before becoming a bookkeeper in a paper mill in 1922; his various jobs later provided material for his stories.
He subsequently worked a string of jobs, eventually landing a position as a bookkeeper, and acted in a local theatrical stock company on the side.
As bookkeeper to the archbishop of Goa, Linschoten spent six years (1583 89) in India.
His father, a Polish immigrant, was a bookkeeper and his mother was a secretary.
In 1846 he went to Cincinnati as a bookkeeper, returning to Pittsburgh in 1850 to marry Jane McDowell, a physician's daughter.
The most infamous occurrence of the blood libel in modern times was the case of Mendel Beilis, a Jewish bookkeeper in Odessa who was accused of ritual murder by the tsarist government in 1911.
After a few years in school learning English, he began to work as a clerk and bookkeeper for the family merchant business in Lower Manhattan.
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