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Words in Business News
By Jon Fernquest

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[Thai Economics Library | Archives (for history)]
November 06, 2007

Recruit

recruit (verb) -
a. actively search for people for a job or to fill a position
b. selecting and persuading people to join an organisation

a recruit (noun) - a person recruited for a position

recruitment (noun) - the act of recruiting people for a position

recruiter (noun) - the person recruiting for a position

recruit from
recruit and train
efforts to recruit
recruit the brightest
recruit the underprivileged
recruit minority students
recruit soldiers
recruit students
recruit employees
recruit university faculty
recruits undergoing training
boot camp for recruits
raw recruits
fresh recruits
recruited as a mole (spy)
hold on to recruited staff
recruitment policies
appraise recruitment policies
launch a nationwide recruitment drive
recruitment advertising
a recruitment drive
a recruitment consultant

train recruits
a training course for recruits
new recruits
new recruits come from
recruit mercenaries
recruit underprivileged students
retention of newly recruited staff
recruit locals
trying to recruit

reward for recruitment


Example sentences:

* Since the economy has been booming recently, it is difficult to hold on to new staff recruited by the company.

* A recent rash of nepotism prompted many employers to appraise their recruitment policies.

* The company is about to launch a nationwide recruitment drive.

* Direct-sale marketing methods, such as multi-level networking, are also used to recruit members. Each canvasser is rewarded for recruiting 10 other canvassers.

* Each canvasser is rewarded for how many new canvassers he or she can recruit.

* Explicit references to age or marital status in recruitment advertising are strictly prohibited.

* The organisation decided to modify their recruitment policies in light of the increasing difficult of finding qualified applicants.

* An examination is an important part of civil service recruitment.

* Recruitment consultants usually help highly qualified professionals who are in short supply by introducing them to potential employers.

* Marine recruiters often approach potential young recruits in the suburban shopping centers in which they hang out with their friends.

* He helped recruit volunteers to help out in Tsunami relief.

* More military recruiting offices have sprung up since the war began.

* The company is formulating a plan to hold on to the new staff they recruit.

* The police were trying to recruit more local people from the town.

* Unfortunately, they are replacing hardened veterans with more experience than raw recruits.

* The time is limited to train these recruits and turn them into professional soldiers.

* Most of the new recruits came from impoverished socio-economic backgrounds.

* All new recruits must undergo an intensive four month training course and many fail to make the grade.

* Employers want to make sure that recruits know a few languages since Europe is so linguistically diverse.

* The recruiter weighed me up and decided I was the man she wanted to hire from the first moment I walked into the office.

* She recruited a couple of mercenaries who knew their way around the country.

* Admissions officers are trying to recruit the brightest students to campus.

* The college is making special efforts to recruit children from underprivileged socio-economic groups.


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