Career
a career (noun) - the period of life spent working in one kind of job
a long career
a brief career
a successful career
a distinguished career
a brilliant career
a promising career
a flagging career
boost his flagging career
a chequered career
her chosen career
a career choice
a teaching career
a political career
carve out a career for oneself
a career move
career advancement
a career path
a career ladder
start out on a career
launch a career
begin a career
embark upon a career
abandon a career
give up a career
an acting career
a literary career
an academic career
a career in banking
the highlight of his career
the peak of her career
at the height of his career
a distinguished career as a teacher of English
a change of career
the nadir of his career
her early career as a novelist
what was perhaps the most difficult decision of his long career
less the big break he needs and more a kind of career prat fall
whether to marry or pursue a career
career guidance
a career appraisal interview
provide counselling in career development
she had always sworn that her private life would take second place to her career
career opportunities
career opportunities for specialists
the company can offer a number of opportunities for career development
the majority of our trainees are hoping for a career in home care
personal skills development and career opportunities
began his career with Vidal Sassoon in 1984
joined the firm with a view to a long-term consultancy career
spent the last five years of his career at our firm
one workshop could change your career and your life
his career was in tatters
career prospects
a journalistic career
managed to carve out such a successful photographic career for himself
the prospect of a long-term career in Europe
a colourful career
a turbulent career
Example sentences:
* My career is precious to me, and you knew that when you married me.
* Mr Lawrence joined Price Waterhouse with a view to a long-term consultancy career.
* What a glorious way to end your career.
* It was definitely the highlight of his career.
* Myself, the world, life, work, relationships, love, sex, health, success, money, my career, my looks, parents, children, knowledge, responsibility, beliefs, the meaning of life, men, women, adulthood, religion, good and evil, reality, luck, change, death, pleasure, fun, limitations, creativity, my body, retirement, leisure.
* Her fabulous career included four Oscar wins, most recently for On Golden Pond in 1981 with Henry Fonda.
* One workshop could change your career and your life. (advertisement)
* Whether to marry or pursue a career; when to have children, or, indeed, whether to have them at all; whether and when to return to work after the children are born; whether to continue working or stay at home and look after an aged relative, the problems for today's woman are endless.
* That he has managed to carve out such a successful photographic career for himself is extraordinary when you consider that he spent the first 12 years of his working life as a bricklayer.
* He sat shame-faced as a court heard that his career was in tatters because of the stag night brawl.
* More should be done by organisations to provide counselling in career development and to encourage self-development for both younger and older employees.
* It can provide a young person with a good understanding of what work is like and what a particular career can offer as well as bringing confidence and enhancing their personal aspirations.
* She had always sworn that her private life would take second place to her career until she had established herself, that she would never become involved with anyone remotely connected with racing, and fortunately temptation had rarely come her way.
* The majority of our trainees are hoping for a career in home care, and we hope that many will be going on to further education at the end of the year.
* With retail businesses accounting for over 60 per cent of Whitbread's turnover, the company can offer a number of opportunities for career development within the Restaurants & Leisure Division.
* Whether or not blacks' career prospects are blighted by covert racialist policies in the occupational sphere is not the question under consideration.
* My journalistic career in those days wasn't without mishap.
* Developing rewards, recognition, and career opportunities for specialists.
* Approaches now being implemented give employees considerably more control over work activities, personal skills development and career opportunities, and also offer significant opportunities for improved organizational performance.
* 1993 marks the commencement of full integration of EC member states and many construction graduates are considering, for the first time, the prospect of a long-term career in Europe.
* He spent the last five years of his career at at the Brize Norton facility, five miles from his home.
* Mac began his career with Vidal Sassoon in 1984 until he became Head of Technology and Cutting for the Ginger Group.
* The public also remembers Mr Ishihara's early career as a novelist.
* But maybe he thinks Hollywood is less the big break he needs and more a kind of career prat fall.
* Having devoted much of his career to the human resources and having been an ardent advocate of participative management, he talks about such problems with an obvious depth of feeling.
* A research scientist by profession and temperament, he had spent all his previous career never more than ten yards away from a laboratory.
* Laing pauses to collect his thoughts when considering what was perhaps the most difficult decision of his long career.
* His subsequent career has been a switchback which reached its nadir five years ago, when Thomas Hearns produced a devastating right to the chin to knock him out and send him into retirement.
* But these larger firms are already cutting down on the size of their student intake and, if the trend continues, will end up, as Grant Thornton has already done, recruiting and training only staff who are expected to make a career with the firm after qualifying.
* The Board had long debates about whether the content of degrees in the areas should be for or in librarianship, what the academic content of study should be, and what career opportunities would be open to students if they were not subject graduates.
* For several years he has been a helper, and having decided to return to Birmingham where he had a distinguished career as a teacher of English, he resolved to give us the greater part of the library, collected over many years by himself and his late wife.






