Recruit
UK /["/rɪˈkruːt/","/rɪˈkruːts/","/rɪˈkruːtɪd/","/rɪˈkruːtɪŋ/"]/US /["/rɪˈkruːt/","/rɪˈkruːts/","/rɪˈkruːtɪd/","/rɪˈkruːtɪŋ/"]/
Definition
to find new people to join a company, an organization, the armed forces, etc.
In simple words: To find and hire new people for a job.
Examples
- The company plans to recruit new employees next month.
- They want to recruit talented musicians for the orchestra.
- During the war, the army tried to recruit more soldiers.
- She was recruited by a top law firm after graduation.
- The club is recruiting members who are passionate about soccer.
- They recruited volunteers to help with the environmental cleanup.
- The army sent recruiters to recruit young people from the town.
Usage notes
Use 'recruit' when discussing hiring, especially in a business or military context. Consider a more informal word like 'hire' for casual settings, but 'recruit' is commonly used in professional and formal situations.
Grammar pattern
recruit + object
Memory hint
Think of 'recruit' as 're-cute' — finding the cute new members for your team.
Collocations
- directly
- actively
- aggressively
- need to
- seek to
- try to
- as
- for
- from
- newly recruited
- recently recruited
- recruit and retain somebody
- directly
- actively
- aggressively
- need to
- seek to
- try to
- as
- for
- from
- newly recruited
- recently recruited
- recruit and retain somebody
Synonyms
- hire
- enlist
- engage
- recruitment
- bring on
Antonyms
- dismiss
- fire
- let go
Common mistakes
- Confusing with 'recruiting' as a noun instead of a verb.
- Using it incorrectly in past tense; remember it's 'recruited'.