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hireable การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • "I don't know how hireable I'll be.
  • Corinne et al . found that science faculty of both sexes rated a male applicant as significantly more competent and hireable than an identical female applicant.
  • The facilities available at The Herbert include a large hireable exhibition space called'The Studio', which is frequently used by the public and organisations.
  • Other facilities offered at the site includes hireable conference rooms, camping grounds, and a new Teepee village named  Buffalo Creek, which allows visitors to build and maintain campfires.
  • Despite his lack of success in recent years, Waltrip is eminently hireable : His past champion's provisional status probably would get some cars into races that have had difficulty qualifying.
  • The skills of the units in the player's unions, which include both story characters and hireable units that do not appear outside of battle, vary according to different parameters.
  • It is permanently configured as an art gallery with weekly exhibitions of local artists'work but is also a hireable space for businesses and organisations who benefit from the exhibitions on the walls.
  • It's a conquer the enemy type of game, which feature hireable troops, with each character having a different set of troops, resources ( gold ) to harvest, which are used to hire troops, and camps where troops are summoned.
  • She notably insisted upon including Yiddish songs in her concerts at Berlin s J黡ischer Kulturbund, an institution created with the consent of the Nazis for the purpose of presenting performances for the Jewish population after Jewish performers were no longer hireable in " Aryan theatres . " In 1931, a book of twenty-four Yiddish folk songs named after Kremer s popular concert series, " A Jewish Life in Song " was published by Chappell & Co . in London.
  • "Whereas the stage actor certainly needs to concern himself or herself with being heard and being understood, and can't necessarily rely on the idiosyncratic charm of his or her voice, " he said, " a film actor can do just that can have the most open, free, released, expressive voice, modulated for film, or can have the most pinched, peculiar, bordering-on-incomprehensible voice, and be all the more hireable for that ."