Inc: Does Your Company Need a Head of Product? It’s the Hardest Role to Fill
Does Your Company Need a Head of Product? It’s the Hardest Role to Fill
The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language gives four definitions of role, the first of which is also rôle A character or part played by a performer. while the other three definitions (related to functions or characteristic behaviour) do not offer rôle. So for some people the circumflex indicates a particular meaning. Not for me.
vs X also plays a role of (job-function). My opinion is that "plays a role as" indicates a greater impact on the role and the company, whereas "plays a role of" is more "does the job". My old dictionary of English language haven't helped and a google search says the "of"-use is the most common, but is also mostly used differently than what I ...
2 Does anyone have a clue or an idiomatic phrase for this: When someone changes themselves in order to fit a role Ex: When someone gets a new job, they learn new abilities to suit that role. Ex2: When someone becomes what their significant other needs rather than staying the same.
Be wary of the fact that Wiktionary gives "roled" word status. It's missing from other online dictionaries, such as Merriam-Webster. At best, I'd say it was an extrapolated word, which is to say that if you used it, someone would understand that you combined the word "role" with the "-ed" ending to form an adjective. Actors who are given roles are said to be "casted" as such and such a ...