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Перевод слова


Перевод: employ speek employ


[существительное]
работа по найму; служба ;
[глагол]
предоставлять работу; нанимать; держать на службе; употреблять; использовать; применять; занимать


Тезаурус:

  1. Here, similar classes were emerging but only about 10 per cent were able to employ wage labour regularly and only 20 per cent provided it regularly.
  2. In most areas there is a Council of Voluntary Service and most of these employ a person called a Volunteer Coordinator.
  3. Because I do not want to influence the mind of the patient in any way, the phrase I usually employ is: "Go to wherever your subconscious mind feels comfortable."
  4. It looks down imperiously towards Staveley, where the vast ironworks used to employ upwards of four thousand men.
  5. The simple fact that he was in her husband's employ gave her an advantage over him.
  6. Assault Boats are, as their description implies, not for pleasurable pursuits, although the construction of 8,442 of them gave the craftsmen of Wolverton, skilled in the art of carriage building, an opportunity to employ their talents.
  7. Even now, many factories employ varying proportions of these two other groups alongside Asian women, but a white man would almost never work in such a place except as a supervisor.
  8. The Nederlands Railways 3100 and 3200 Class units employ Cummins diesel engines with Voith hydraulic transmission driving through permanently engaged final drives on the axles.
  9. He went out to Nigeria in 1900 with his mind already made up to employ such a system, once he had conquered the country.
  10. The farms round about had had to employ German prisoners for labour, and on the whole they were quite well behaved.
  11. The Turks had used none of the sophisticated machinery that the Nazis were to employ against another minority community less than 30 years later.
  12. As we shall see, the attempt to employ the same concepts to describe quite different tasks was a common phenomenon among young nationalists.
  13. But there also appears to be what Phillipson, drawing on Cicourel, would call "basic interpretative rules" (Phillipson 1972: 148), which the police employ when making practical decisions of this sort: the reasonableness of the offender's excuse (Ericson 1982: 147), and whether or not offenders display deference (Black 1970: 1101; Dix and Layzell 1983: 73; Sykes and Clark 1975).

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