ロングマン現代英英辞典よりstafferstaff‧er /ˈstɑːfə $ ˈstæfər/ noun [countable] American Englishsomeone who is paid to work for an organizationコーパスの例staffer• He had been a staffer in George Bush's administration.• Buchanan has only $ 2 million in the bank and only two paid campaignstaffers in South Carolina.• Polgar was not the only committeestaffer with glaringconflicts of interest.• His openness is counter-cultural in these times of limitedaccess, control-freak staffers, and ubiquitoussecuritydetails.• Cruz also said Muni planned to hire at least 12 additionalsafetystaffers, bringing the total to 72.• A secretariatstaffer involved with the latter says multinationalindustry should police itself.• Some staffers have been trained to take on additional law-enforcement roles, Diller says.• And so what if the first ladyarranged to have the travelstaffers fired?• Young staffers are bucking the boss and wearing suits on casual Fridays.ロングマンビジネス辞典よりstafferstaf‧fer /ˈstɑːfəˈstæfər/ noun [countable] journalismsomeone who works for a particular organization, especially in the computer industry or the MEDIA (=television, radio, and newspapers)19 of the consortium’s 23 full-time staffers had their contracts terminated.