Flunky in a sentence as a noun

Methinks Stanford is just pissed that a flunky got through their program.

Over all I agree, but I have a problem with the term "flunky" in that paragraph.

The problem with this question is that you are probably talking to a HR flunky at this point.

This isn't some low-level flunky taking a bribe under the table to move things along.

Take note of the naming convention in the low-level HR flunky's email.

58k is bread for a year, and at the end you muddle through your own taxes with that flunky from the H&R Block in the strip mall.

Your goal is to have your need satisfied without treating the listener as a flunky who can be bossed around at will.

The PR flunky is either lying or totally misinformed - I'm guessing the latter.

To engender a spirit of goodwill, joviality and kindness such that the flunky wants to help you.

It irks me a little how everyone keeps dropping the "high-school dropout" bit. If you watch the video of him speaking [1], it is readily apparent he is no flunky.

That would probably be on the table if Lodsys weren't just a flunky for a massive consortium of patent trolls.

Given the complexity of most top game titles, this just isn’t practical — if you were good enough to do the job, why would you want to be a flunky?

A low-level flunky trying to deny someone entry for specious reasons would get into trouble.

Any tips on convincing a recruiter to set me up with a phone call to the hiring manager first, rather than to a low-level HR flunky?

I've held several positions in America, from subsistence farmer to minimum wage retail flunky to upper management in higher education.

Actually it is far better that academics teaching to the students provide this support since they actually know what the students will face, not some admin flunky who has no real idea of what happens in the classroom.

Flunky definitions

noun

a male servant (especially a footman)

See also: lackey flunkey

noun

a person of unquestioning obedience

See also: flunkey stooge yes-man