Artificial intelligent assistant

moonlighter

moonlighter
  (ˈmuːnlaɪtə(r))
  [Formed as next: see -er1.]
  1. One who engages in moonlighting or commits a moonlighting outrage.

1882 Leeds Merc. 27 Mar., A ‘moonlighter’ shot by the police. 1893 Vizetelly Glances Back II. xxxv. 275 Irish landlords driven abroad..by the fear of moonlighters.

  2. One who does a ‘moonlight flit’. dial. and colloq.

1903 in Eng. Dial. Dict. 1964 Sunday Mail (Brisbane) 15 Nov. 12 Brisbane flat owners..estimate that moonlighters—tenants who slip away overnight without paying the rent—are costing them {pstlg}100,000 a year.

  3. One who ‘moonlights’ (moonlight v. 3). colloq.

1957 Times 12 Nov. (Canada Suppl.) p. ix/4 ‘Moonlighters’ take a second job after hours; married women take advantage of modern kitchens to do the same. 1964 Observer 9 Aug. 9/2 Even in America, an estimated four million workers are ‘moonlighters’—that is, they take on a part-time job on top of their full-time one. 1973 C. Egleton Seven Days to Killing v. 61, I employ a lot of moonlighters, blokes who take a second job at nights.

Oxford English Dictionary

yu7NTAkq2jTfdvEzudIdQgChiKuccveC 410bf3e3e16f3777058a13423d9b4f20