white-collar

Etymology
From the colour of dress shirts worn by professional and clerical workers, as opposed to the rugged denim and chambray shirts normally worn by manual workers.

Adjective

 * 1) Of or pertaining to office work and workers; contrasted with blue-collar.
 * 2) Pertaining to the culture of white-collar workers, as values, politics, etc.; contrasted with blue-collar.
 * 1) Pertaining to the culture of white-collar workers, as values, politics, etc.; contrasted with blue-collar.
 * 1) Pertaining to the culture of white-collar workers, as values, politics, etc.; contrasted with blue-collar.

Translations

 * Catalan: de guant blanc, de coll blanc
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Dutch: witteboorden-
 * Finnish: valkokaulus-
 * French:
 * Georgian: საოფისე, საკანცელარიო, თეთრსაყელოიანი
 * Indonesian: kerah putih
 * Japanese: ホワイトカラー
 * Korean:
 * Macedonian: канцела́риски
 * Malay: kolar putih
 * Portuguese: de/do colarinho branco
 * Russian:, , , , «бе́лый воротничо́к»
 * Welsh: coler wen