Temporary in a sentence as a noun

My landlord "owns" the property, but she's sold me the temporary, exclusive right to decide who can come on it and who can't.

I feel fortunate to be an eternal optimist who knows these things are temporary, but the startup lows are about as low as they come.

But it really feels like a social band-aid, a temporary solution hiding the symptoms but not the underlying problem.

> Until that point, his only brush with the law was a temporary restraining order two years earlier.> "He started threatening me, saying that he would **** me.

But the longer-term political winds are against it, in my view, and it will prove a temporary obstacle at most as the modern tech impetus advances.

Actually, I think "hire them on a temporary basis" is more egomaniacal than obsessing over job interview questions.

To help our customers we decided that it was a good idea to take a temporary snapshot of the droplet after the destroy was issued that would automatically expire.

The situation is that often a large function will be composed of many smaller, clearly separable steps that involve temporary, intermediate results.

Temporary in a sentence as an adjective

I learned that even in successful companies, everything is temporary, and that great products are usually built through a lot of hard work by many people rather than great ah-ha insights.

You don't get lost in things you think you already knowyou learn concepts fresh and the language, because it's so weird and wild and totally abstract and you can't imagine using it for any real projectis as malleable and temporary as modeling clay.

In part this is because Washington allows non-competes, but also doesn't like to infringe on the free flow of labor -- temporary restraining orders preventing an individual from working for a company are extraordinarily rare.

Understand > the trade-offs being made and the factors that led to them; > understand temporary solutions and the priorities that necessitate > them, but don't accept a decision that you feel is wrong without > raising the issue and getting a better understanding.

Spking is likely operating on a temporary definition imparted by his upbringing that goes something like this: "a good life is a life which, when seen from afar, appears to include a string of successful and well-respected achievements, each one better than the last".

"I'm just a smart guy with a fresh pair of eyes who spent a few weekends reading undergrad textbooks and skimming pubmed".Not: "we're a large company with deeply-interested professionals who've made this their life's work, our own multi-million dollar labs and decades of accumulated experience in the development, testing, validation and manufacture of temporary food substitutes".

Here's the flipside:--most people working in Amazon warehouses are employed by temporary staffing firms, not Amazon--most people working in Amazon warehouses don't come anywhere near 3 years of tenure before quitting or being fired--reimbursement is limited to $2,000/year for four years, while $5,000/year is pretty much the minimum direct cost to take such programs--the program is limited to full-time workers, so only those who can take classes while working full-time and mandatory-or-you-get-fired overtime can partakeThe number of warehouse workers eligible for this is nearly zero.

Temporary definitions

noun

a worker (especially in an office) hired on a temporary basis

See also: temp

adjective

not permanent; not lasting; "politics is an impermanent factor of life"- James Thurber; "impermanent palm cottages"; "a temperary arrangement"; "temporary housing"

See also: impermanent

adjective

lacking continuity or regularity; "an irregular worker"; "employed on a temporary basis"

See also: irregular