0 a person whose job is to carry things, especially travellers' bags at railway stations, airports, hotels etc.: --
a glass of porter
2 a person whose job is to carry bags at railroad stations and airports --
3 a person whose job is to carry things, especially travellers' bags at railway stations, airports, hotels, etc. --
4 a person whose job is to be present at the entrance to a large building, for example a hotel, in order to help visitors --
The whole of the passengers and porters were geared to it; everyone was geared to it.
The porters there are working outdoors in outdoor clothing, and so on.
They are divided into two classes—the shipmen and the quaymen or porters.
I would also like to ask what wages the messengers, porters, and cleaners are being paid.
I regret that at present there is a shortage of 40 nursing staff, 28 engineering and works staff, 25 porters, orderlies and domestics.
In other words, ancillary staff—porters and operators of furnaces and incinerators—have no protection whatever in this matter.
Labour recruitment at this time was mostly of larger groups of porters and labourers, gathered together by labour recruiters, sometimes with the assistance of chiefs or headmen.
A prolonged delay in supplying guides or porters might succeed in forcing the traveller to stay the night, and provide the opportunity for more complex ceremonies to transfer semangat.