This document provides examples of jobs in Spanish and English, including the articles "a" and "an" used with different occupations. It lists common jobs like doctor, actor, musician, builder, engineer, teacher, shop assistant, manager, cleaner, housewife, police officer, lawyer, waiter, accountant, unemployed, and retired. It notes that unemployed and retired are used as adjectives rather than jobs, and provides the question "What's your job?" to ask about someone's occupation.
This document provides examples of jobs in Spanish and English, including the articles "a" and "an" used with different occupations. It lists common jobs like doctor, actor, musician, builder, engineer, teacher, shop assistant, manager, cleaner, housewife, police officer, lawyer, waiter, accountant, unemployed, and retired. It notes that unemployed and retired are used as adjectives rather than jobs, and provides the question "What's your job?" to ask about someone's occupation.
This document provides examples of jobs in Spanish and English, including the articles "a" and "an" used with different occupations. It lists common jobs like doctor, actor, musician, builder, engineer, teacher, shop assistant, manager, cleaner, housewife, police officer, lawyer, waiter, accountant, unemployed, and retired. It notes that unemployed and retired are used as adjectives rather than jobs, and provides the question "What's your job?" to ask about someone's occupation.
Doctor a doctor Actor/ Actriz an actor/ an actress
Msico a musician Constructor a builder
Ingeniero an engineer Maestro a teacher Vendedor a shop assistant Gerente a manager Limpiador a cleaner Ama de casa a housewife Polica a police officer Abogado a lawyer Camarero (a) a waiter/a waitress Desempleado unemployed Contador an accountant Jubilado retired * What do you do? = What's your job? * We use a or an with jobs. I'm a lawyer. * Unemployed and retired are adjectives. We say: I'm a retired. What's your JOB?