Across
- 4. working the normal number of hours for a job, usually about 40 a week.
- 8. not having a job.
- 10. a professional cook, especially in a restaurant or hotel.
- 12. driver a person who drives people to places in a taxi.
- 13. a doctor who looks after your teeth.
- 14. the person who tells other workers what to do.
- 17. to stop working because you are too old.
- 18. a person who answers the phone and greets visitors in an office or hotel.
- 21. a person whose job is to put out fires and rescue people.
- 25. a formal meeting where an employer asks you questions before giving you a job.
- 28. a person who designs buildings.
- 30. someone whose job is to advise people about the law or represent them in court.
- 31. the money you get regularly, usually every month, for your job.
- 32. someone who works on a farm, growing crops or keeping animals
Down
- 1. a person who writes articles or reports for newspapers, magazines or TV.
- 2. a doctor who treats animals.
- 3. a person who repairs water pipes, taps or toilets.
- 5. extra hours that you work after your normal working time.
- 6. a person whose job is to keep or check financial records.
- 7. a room or building where people do desk work.
- 9. someone who installs or repairs electrical systems.
- 11. a person who serves food and drinks in a restaurant.
- 15. assistant a person who serves customers in a shop.
- 16. working fewer hours than a normal full‑time job.
- 19. a person who looks after sick or injured people in a hospital.
- 20. all the people who work for a company or in a place.
- 22. to get money for the work that you do.
- 23. someone who works in a library and helps people find books.
- 24. a person who repairs cars or other machines.
- 26. a person you work with.
- 27. to send a CV or form because you want to get a job.
- 29. your working life or the jobs you do over a long period of time.
