The English Oracle

Hire an employee (a consultant)?

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Music by Eric Matyas
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Track title: Mysterious Puzzle

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Chapters
00:00 Hire An Employee (A Consultant)?
00:20 Accepted Answer Score 11
00:40 Answer 2 Score 5
00:47 Answer 3 Score 6
01:09 Answer 4 Score 6
01:17 Thank you

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Full question
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Tags
#singlewordrequests #verbs #americanenglish #analogy

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 11


Hire is appropriate for a consultant, or more generally for any kind of temporary worker. I’ve also heard “bring in/on a consultant” more than once, which sounds good to me—it conveys more of the “stop in for a few and help out” nature of consulting, I think.




ANSWER 2

Score 6


Retain is a good word for this, often used in official contexts. Historically, it has been used to refer to the hiring of legal services. That historical context helps emphasise that a specific service has been paid for (rather than a person employed permanently) and that the term of service may be temporary, with a specific goal in mind.




ANSWER 3

Score 6


I'm a consultant, and I tend to be engaged as one by my clients.




ANSWER 4

Score 5


In the UK, we might be more inclined to appoint a consultant.