stockboy
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]stockboy (plural stockboys)
- A young stockman raising livestock.
- 1938, Xavier Herbert, chapter VI, in Capricornia[1], page 85:
- He spoke quietly, in a rather cultured voice, saying, "Your brother Mark gave Jock one of his halfcaste piccaninnies for a stock-boy. […] "
- A young stockman, an employee at a store stocking shelves; an entry-level retail employee.
- 1991, Alex Kotlowitz, There are no Children Here[2], page 194:
- He had graduated from Cregier High School two months earlier and quickly landed a job as a stockboy at Order from Horder, a stationery store chain.
- 1991 September 19, Tim Sniffen, Tangelo Pie[3] (comic), University of Massachusetts Amherst:
- Excuse me, but is this huge application necessary? Listing job experience — what experience is crucial for being a stock boy?
- 2009 April 19, Allen Salkin, “He’s the Man Who Sets the Table”, in New York Times[4]:
- When an aunt who was an actress helped him find a job in the William Morris mailroom, where would-be agents traditionally start, the salary was not enough to support him, so he took a second job working as a stockboy at a Macy’s in New Jersey.
- 2013, Arthur Danto, chapter 1, in What Art Is, New Haven: Yale University Press, page 36:
- A marvelous photograph by Fred McDarrah shows Andy [Warhol] standing among his boxes, like a stock boy in the stockroom, his pasty face looking out at us.