释义 |
recruitment
re·cruit R0091900 (rĭ-kro͞ot′)v. re·cruit·ed, re·cruit·ing, re·cruits v.tr.1. a. To enlist (persons) in military service.b. To strengthen or raise (an armed force) by enlistment.2. To hire or enroll, or seek to hire or enroll (new employees, members, or students).3. To renew or restore (health or vitality, for example).v.intr.1. To enlist personnel in a military force.2. To recruit new employees, members, or students.n.1. A newly engaged member of a military force, especially one of the lowest rank or grade.2. A new member of an organization. [French recruter, from obsolete recrute, recruit, variant of recrue, from feminine past participle of recroître, to grow again, from Old French recroistre : re-, re- + croistre, to grow (from Latin crēscere; see ker- in Indo-European roots).] re·cruit′er n.re·cruit′ment n.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | recruitment - the act of getting recruits; enlisting people for the army (or for a job or a cause etc.)enlistingaccomplishment, achievement - the action of accomplishing something | Translationsrecruit (rəˈkruːt) noun1. a person who has (just) joined the army, air force etc. 新兵 新兵2. a person who has (just) joined a society, group etc. Our party needs new recruits before the next election. 新成員 新成员 verb to cause to join the army, a society etc. We must recruit more troops; Can't you recruit more members to the music society? 招募,招收 征募,吸收 reˈcruitment noun 招募,招收 招收
Recruitment
recruitment[ri′krüt·mənt] (physiology) A serial discharge from neurons innervating groups of muscle fibers. Recruitment (Russian, verbovka; from German werben via Polish werbowac), the hiring of people for military service, one method of troop replacement. In antiquity this method was used chiefly in the form of hiring whole detachments of foreigners in wartime. Another form of recruitment was individual hiring of soldiers, primarily citizens of the country concerned, for a long time or for lifelong military service (the hired standing armies of ancient Rome and Byzantium). In Western Europe in the Middle Ages, hired troops came to be widely used in the 15th century, and from the end of the 15th century the hired army system became the main system of replacing troops (for instance, during the Thirty Years’ War of 1618-48). Recruitment was rarely voluntary: threats, deception, the use of intoxicants, and direct violence were the usual accompaniments of recruitment. These methods were practiced in Western Europe, especially in Prussia, until the end of the 18th century. Among the great powers only Great Britain and the USA maintained the recruitment system until World War I. In Russia recruitment had not been practiced on a wide scale. At present a considerable part of the personnel of the armed forces serve for hire in various countries such as the USA, West Germany, France, and Great Britain. recruitment
recruitment [re-kro̳t´ment] 1. the gradual increase to a maximum in a reflex when a stimulus of unaltered intensity is prolonged.2. in audiology, an abnormal increase in loudness caused by a very slight increase in sound intensity, as in meniere's disease.re·cruit·ment (rē-krūt'mĕnt), 1. In the testing of hearing, the abnormally greater increase in loudness in response to increments in intensity of the acoustic stimulus in an ear with a sensory hearing loss compared with that of a normal ear. See also: irradiation (3). 2. In neurophysiology, the activation of additional neurons (spatial recruitment) or an increase in their firing rate (temporal recruitment). See also: irradiation (3). Synonym(s): recruiting response3. The adding of parallel channels of flow in any system. [Fr. recrutement, fr. L. re-cresco, pp. -cretus, to grow again] recruitment (rĭ-kro͞ot′mənt)n.1. An abnormal disproportionate sensation of loudness to sounds of increasing intensity.2. The activation of additional motor neurons in response to sustained stimulation of a given receptor or afferent nerve.recruitment Medtalk The process of finding a suitable candidate for a position Neurology An ↑ in number of active motor units involved in a neuromuscular response, resulting from the temporal or spatial summation of a stimulus or from an ↑ intensity of a stimulusre·cruit·ment (rĕ-krūt'mĕnt) 1. audiology The unequal reaction of the ear to equal steps of increasing intensity, measured in decibels, with greater than normal increment in perceived loudness. 2. The bringing into activity of additional motor neurons, causing greater activity in response to increased duration of the stimulus applied to a given receptor or afferent nerve. See also: irradiation3. The adding of parallel channels of flow in any system.[Fr. recrutement, fr. L. re-cresco, pp. -cretus, to grow again]recruitment 1. Activation of an increasing number of responsive cells as the size of the stimulus increases. 2. An unpleasant blasting sensation experienced by people with sensorineural deafness when exposed to loud noises. LegalSeeRecruitrecruitment Related to recruitment: recruitment and selectionSynonyms for recruitmentnoun the act of getting recruitsSynonymsRelated Words- accomplishment
- achievement
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