What is another word for enlisting?

Pronunciation: [ɛnlˈɪstɪŋ] (IPA)

Enlisting refers to the act of recruiting or hiring someone for a particular purpose. There are several synonyms for this word, such as employing, engaging, enrolling, and hiring. Employing refers to giving someone a job or work for payment, while engaging means to involve someone in a particular task or activity. Enrolling, on the other hand, refers to registering or enlisting someone's name for a particular program or course, while hiring refers to engaging someone to work for a particular job or task. All these synonyms essentially convey the same meaning of involving someone for a particular purpose, albeit with varying nuances.

What are the paraphrases for Enlisting?

Paraphrases are restatements of text or speech using different words and phrasing to convey the same meaning.
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What are the hypernyms for Enlisting?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the hyponyms for Enlisting?

Hyponyms are more specific words categorized under a broader term, known as a hypernym.

Usage examples for Enlisting

He was utterly miserable and reckless; he once spoke, half in jest, of enlisting.
"Only One Love, or Who Was the Heir"
Charles Garvice
I have had nothing to do with it beyond enlisting Uncle Matthew's help.
"Hetty Wesley"
Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
But it was not the crushing of Transvaal independence in which the army was employed that formed the only argument against enlisting.
"The Evolution of Sinn Fein"
Robert Mitchell Henry

Famous quotes with Enlisting

  • I couldn't be happier that President Bush has stood up for having served in the National Guard, because I can finally put an end to all those who questioned my motives for enlisting in the Army Reserve at the height of the Vietnam War.
    Larry David
  • From 1941 to 1945 we won a war by enlisting the whole-hearted support of all our people and all our resources.
    James Forrestal
  • While reasonable men will ungrudgingly submit to such curtailment of their liberties as will promote at least the greater liberty of all, to the exact degree to which such curtailment may become will the enforcement of it have to rest on force. Force against reason: reason, because it has the power of enlisting force to fight for it, will win. From the recognition of that truth has come democracy.
    Rockwell Kent
  • And lately fashion photographers, bored with Rome or the Acropolis, have ventured farther afield for the frisson of syncretism. Why not Calcutta? Why not the slums of Rio? Cairo? Mexico City? The attempt is for an unearned, casual brush with awe by enlisting untouchable extras. And if the model can be seen to move with idiot stridency through tragedy, then the model is invincible. Luxury is portrayed as protective. Or protected. Austere, somehow—“spiritual.” Irony posing as asceticism or as worldly-wise.
    Richard Rodriguez
  • That’s behind me. Same as with everything else in my life, though, I approached what I learned with eyes and ears half-closed. It’s only now I realise how dangerous and destructive Christian culture has become. If there was ever any love in it, it’s been bled out. Three major religions preach Holy War: Shintoism, Islam, and Christianity. Christianity is the only one hypocritical enough simultaneously to enjoin its followers to turn the other cheek and suffer fools gladly and the rest of it. Look at the record. Germany was a Christian country almost exactly one hundred times as long as it was Nazi. Did the Nazis undo in twelve years all the church had done in twelve centuries? No, they built on it. Hitler was a baptised Catholic and never excommunicated. When he was enlisting the support of the bishops in 1933 he promised to do nothing to the Jews that the church had not already, and kept his promise.
    John Brunner

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