Shingle in a sentence as a noun

"Hang out my shingle and start my own accounting firm.

The "hang out your shingle" definition was the last thing I would've thought of.

Do your stint in government, then hang out your shingle as a private consultant.

Anyone can hang out a shingle as a software developer.

At least a shingle can't crash and corrupt all your revision metadata.

Anyone is free to read an online python book, install mysql, and hang out a shingle as a web programmer.

You don't re-shingle your house with homeowner's insurance.

I said it tongue-in-cheek, but I did feel that way, and eventually left corporate work to hang out my own shingle.

Shingle in a sentence as a verb

Common access for anyone is a brilliant feature of the internet where anyone can hang out their shingle on equal terms.

Without a ton of marketing muscle or the good graces of the kingmakers at Apple just hanging your shingle out in the App store doesn't get you anywhere.

As a website-building shingle-hanger, I love that "in 2 minutes" services exist.

One avenue of many is hanging out your shingle as a consultant and charging what your empirical results suggest you can get away with.

>Goldman wasn't obligated to put up a shingle reading "We are losing our appetite for CDOs, and so can't take your money if you think they're still a great investment.

If you're capable of being CTO at a mobile games company but have glasses which are an appreciable portion of your net worth, you are not being paid the global market wage for your skill set. Consider quitting and hanging out your shingle as an independent iOS/etc developer.

" is not advice which has his best interests at heart.+ Freelance Rails developers can put out a shingle and get $100 an hour, which trivially gets them to $10k a month even at about 70% utilization.

''You seem persistently to confuse me with someone who merely hangs out a shingle with the word Conversationalist on it, and this operation with a fly-by-night one strung together with chewing gum and twine.

Shingle definitions

noun

building material used as siding or roofing

See also: shake

noun

coarse beach gravel of small waterworn stones and pebbles (or a stretch of shore covered with such gravel)

noun

a small signboard outside the office of a lawyer or doctor, e.g.

verb

cover with shingles; "shingle a roof"