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Discover LudwigThe phrase "work in stores" is correct and can be used in written English
It can be used to refer to a job that involves working in a retail setting, such as a store. For example, "He's been working in stores for 10 years."
Exact(17)
And one obvious example of consumer irrationality continues to work in stores' favor; namely, the Christmas shopping season itself.
Women went to work in stores, decorating everything from individual plates to entire dinner services, filling customers' orders and eventually inspiring other women to become china painters.
One of his first actions was to send thousands of head office staff, including senior executives, to work in stores in a demonstration that Tesco valued customers.
Calling employees salespeople, the branches they work in stores, the people they are serve customers and the services they offer products is simply out of touch.
"We need men and women immediately" to clean homes and offices, or work in stores or factories, it says, in Spanish.
And about three times as many blacks as whites say that blacks are treated less fairly than whites at work, in stores or restaurants, in public schools and by the health care system.
Similar(43)
Joyce worked in store as teenager; left to raise children.
There is more work in store for the family patriarch, who turned 80 last spring.
I used to recruit for Boots – one of the first things office-based employees (at any level) would do is work in store.
The Alliance spokesperson is right, however, when he acknowledges the hard work in store.
"Working in stores will help them integrate into the real world," Mr. Reiss said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com