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Is anything man a word (noun)?

Is there a synonym or a better word?

Context (my emphasis):

After college he was working for Fawcette Technical Publications (as anything man - design, editing, helping plan the conferences like VBITS and VSLive!).

Daniel
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4 Answers4

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Though anything man is not a common term, some good synonyms are:

  • jack-of-all-trades - a person who is adept at many different kinds of work.
  • factotum - 1. a person, as a handyman or servant, employed to do all kinds of work around the house. 2. any employee or official having many different responsibilities.
  • handyman - a person hired to do various small Jobs [sic], especially in the maintenance of an apartment building, office building, or the like.
  • tinker - 3. a person skilled in various minor kinds of mechanical work; jack-of-all-trades.
Daniel
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  • I believed Dictionary.com at first for proteus and pantologist, but vetoed them after seeing their definition. – Daniel Jul 30 '11 at 13:48
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    Also chief cook and bottle washer, which notwithstanding Wikipedia's definition, I don't particularly associate with being "the boss" so much as "the poor sod who has to do just about everything". – FumbleFingers Jul 30 '11 at 14:21
  • Jack of all trades has a negative connotation to it, generally being seen in the sentence Jack of all trades, master of none. – nico Jul 30 '11 at 15:03
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    I think factotum comes closest, given the context. However Wiktionary says "dated". – Peter Mortensen Jul 30 '11 at 15:07
  • There's also gofer, which is someone who does assorted unskilled tasks, although the word the OP wants would need more skilled work than a gofer usually does. – Peter Shor Jul 30 '11 at 15:40
  • @nico: I disagree. This site is the fourth result of googling jack-of-all-trades (the first two refer to Wikipedia's Jack of all trades, master of none page). Almost every time I've seen it used, it was used without a trace of negativity. – Daniel Jul 30 '11 at 15:47
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    @drm: I mostly heard it associated with master of none. However I agree that it can be used without any negative acception. I would however prefer factotum in that case. – nico Jul 30 '11 at 16:11
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    @nico: I personally love that word, and keep wondering why it's not used more often. – Daniel Jul 30 '11 at 16:12
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"Anything man" is not an established idiom that I've ever heard. However, within the context that you've provided its meaning is readily deduced as referring to someone who does anything, so I would say that you should feel free to use it.

JSBձոգչ
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Try Polymath instead, it is much nicer. Also according to this even if it was possible to have such phrase then it would be "Everything Man" but not "Anything Man"

jimjim
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What about handyman?

handyman (noun) - a man skilled in various odd jobs and other small tasks.

apaderno
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Phil
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