badgeless

badgeless

(ˈbædʒlɪs)
adj
without a badge
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Additionally, the government program manager was onsite at the developer location 1 day per week, with some engineers being onsite up to 3 days per week, effectively creating a badgeless work environment where decisions could be made face-to-face and nearly as quickly as sending an e-mail or text message.
Other complaints concerned the removal of chairs and tables in the main lobby of the Fontainebleau, a measure prompted in order to discourage badgeless people from using the area as a meeting place.
We use that facility for a variety of purposes, but primarily it is a space where we can bring teams together to brainstorm and explore in a nonhierarchical, badgeless environment, including warfighters, acquisition customers, industry partners, and even competitors.
BADGELESS boss Gareth Southgate was handed perhaps the best job prospects of any Boro manager ever.
I've just spent a week with the badgeless 320d ED and it is quite amazing.
Badgeless cars are blighting the second-hand market, according to experts.
Another wrong punch and he'll be badgeless. A bloodhound sent to hicksville on a sleeper, he stumbles on a country missile.
The badgeless Don's downfall began 21 years ago with a 2-0 World Cup defeat in Rome, where Hoddle goes in October dying for England's first victory in Italy since the 1948 days of Stanley Matthews, Tom Finney and Tommy Lawton.
However, the "badgeless" meetings moved to the hotel's indoor and outdoor restaurants instead.
Newly installed and controversially badgeless boss Gareth Southgate contrived to throw away a two goal lead in the opening 19 minutes as his UEFA Cup finalists went down 3-2 at newly promoted Reading, the start of a long inching slide backwards.
Developing a Cohesive, Cooperative Culture: the Badgeless Team