
Customer, client, clientele. - WordReference Forums
Jul 28, 2005 · A client is someone who purchases or gets your service while a customer is the one who takes advantage or purchases your products. I also know that there are two kinds of …
"Customer Service" or "Customer Services" - WordReference Forums
Jan 7, 2009 · To my mind you'd find a "customer service department" in a small business or a branch of a large corporation. A government, state, municipal or federal, or a large corporation …
Customer vs. Client - WordReference Forums
Nov 21, 2008 · Client - Of lawyers, of a legal adviser, of an attorney - Person using the services of any professional. Also a fixed buyer in a store. Customer - Casual buyers in shops, stores. …
client / customer - WordReference Forums
Nov 4, 2005 · Customer is more generally used while a client is more professional, for certain type of job or business (lawyers, managers,agents..) A customer is person who buys goods or a …
client / customer - WordReference Forums
Feb 1, 2005 · What's the difference between client and customer please ? Moderator note: multiple threads merged to create this one
Customer/client = he, she, they or it - WordReference Forums
Sep 1, 2024 · "Did you receive our prices?" "Yes, I have sent them to my customer (client) and I'm awaiting his / her / its / their responce." I made this dialog. Which pronoun I should if my …
Client VS Customer Sales Department - WordReference Forums
Feb 11, 2011 · Hi everybody, I'm translating a text about the reorganization of a company and it says that the "Customer Sales Department changed its name into Client Sales Department", …
Our client and us / our client and we - WordReference Forums
Jun 7, 2013 · Hi all, Which one of the following is correct, (if any)? Our client and us are delighted to... Our client and we are delighted to... I tend to think the latter is best but it seems that this …
Client or customer - WordReference Forums
Feb 23, 2008 · For an art gallery, should we talk about a customer or a client? As a general rule, what's the difference between those two words. Yul
customer of a prostitute or hooker. | WordReference Forums
Aug 16, 2006 · Also isn't a "kerb-crawler" someone who drives slowly along the kerb (curb in USA) in his car looking for a prostitute? In the UK a punter now is a mildly derogatory term for …