释义 |
Definition of extern in English: externnoun ɛkˈstəːnɪkˈstəːnˈɛkstərn 1North American A person working in but not living in an institution, such as a non-resident doctor or other worker in a hospital. Example sentencesExamples - Collaboration between the extern or intern, clinical educator, and preceptor is extremely important if the student is to successfully achieve the goals.
- There would also be controls on recruitment and tightening up of costs in relation to waste management, charged services and extern costs.
- The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations standards that pertain to the extern role are presented in class.
- I worked at the hospital with three more externs, shifting to a new section of the hospital each quarter.
- For the student nurse in the extern role, this translates to practicing in the perioperative setting the critical-thinking, interpersonal, and technical skills learned in school.
- In terms of skills, externs often function in a role similar to that of a nursing assistant.
- Evaluations of the program from preceptors, interns, and externs demonstrate that the program has provided an excellent foundation of knowledge on which to build.
- This early socialization process is important because it recognizes that the nurse extern is a team member and provides a sense of permanence.
- Nurse externs work under the direct supervision of preceptors in a variety of settings.
- Three weeks before the scheduled event, residents and externs are required to begin their search for a scientific article that answers clinical questions or raises innovative ideas.
- 1.1 A student participating in a temporary training programme in a workplace.
she worked as a judicial extern for two US federal judges Example sentencesExamples - She worked as a judicial extern for two US federal judges as well as a trainee at the European Commission's Legal Service.
- She has already resumed her rigorous stollen-baking schedule, a regimen into which she was indoctrinated as an overworked extern at Bouley.
- Opportunities for doing the skills lead the externs to higher levels of competency.
- If you were an extern at the French Laundry, your first job would most likely be peeling carrots.
- What I and the two other externs didn't know was that each kitchen recruited and ‘bid’ for a particular extern.
- Sponsors and students should jointly determine the extern's role in his/her experience as well as the length of the externship.
- Each semester Justice Clark had three to five law students working for him as externs.
- During that time, I took a break to serve as an extern on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
- This university program does not create an employment relationship between the extern and the sponsor.
- Each year up to six students will be chosen to work as paid summer externs.
2(in a strictly enclosed order of nuns) a sister who does not live exclusively within the enclosure and goes on outside errands. (有时不住在修道院内的跑外差的)外勤修女 Example sentencesExamples - In the miniature society of the cloister, numbering between ten and eleven sisters and an extern or two, her success meets some of the same responses a successful worldly artist would find.
- The two other externs, whose duties often prevented them from having time for silent meditation, had also chosen to remain.
- These three sisters are the externs at the convent of St. Teresa in Coimbra where Sister Lucia lived for 57 years.
verbɛkˈstəːnɪkˈstəːn [with object]SE Asian Banish (someone considered politically undesirable) from a region or district. 〈东南亚〉驱逐(政治异己分子) he was externed for inciting communal tension in the city 他因在孟买挑起种族紧张局势而被驱逐。 Example sentencesExamples - The chief instigators of communal riots in Kodgu, Jagdish Karanth, Pramod Muthalik, Bopayya, Devayya, Somesh and Sunil Subramani must be immediately arrested and externed.
- Probably externed from his native Tirunelveli district, he moved to Chennai with his wife and two young sons.
- He got bail in 2001 and lived in Surat for six months after being externed from Thane district by the court.
Derivativesnoun And depending on the nature of the crime, the police would invoke MCOC, MPDA (Maharashtra Prevention of Dangerous Activities Act) or initiate externment proceedings against them, depending on the severity of their offence. Example sentencesExamples - The forest people have also taken away our externment rules.
- Gawli, 53, returned to Mumbai in 2000 after three years of externment in Pune.
OriginMid 16th century (as an adjective in the sense 'external'): from French externe or Latin externus, from exter 'outer'. The word was used by Shakespeare to mean 'outward appearance'; current noun senses date from the early 17th century. Definition of extern in US English: externnounˈɛkstərnˈekstərn 1North American A person working in but not living in an institution, such as a nonresident doctor or other worker in a hospital. Example sentencesExamples - Collaboration between the extern or intern, clinical educator, and preceptor is extremely important if the student is to successfully achieve the goals.
- Evaluations of the program from preceptors, interns, and externs demonstrate that the program has provided an excellent foundation of knowledge on which to build.
- In terms of skills, externs often function in a role similar to that of a nursing assistant.
- This early socialization process is important because it recognizes that the nurse extern is a team member and provides a sense of permanence.
- Three weeks before the scheduled event, residents and externs are required to begin their search for a scientific article that answers clinical questions or raises innovative ideas.
- For the student nurse in the extern role, this translates to practicing in the perioperative setting the critical-thinking, interpersonal, and technical skills learned in school.
- I worked at the hospital with three more externs, shifting to a new section of the hospital each quarter.
- Nurse externs work under the direct supervision of preceptors in a variety of settings.
- There would also be controls on recruitment and tightening up of costs in relation to waste management, charged services and extern costs.
- The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations standards that pertain to the extern role are presented in class.
- 1.1 A student participating in a temporary training program in a workplace.
she worked as a judicial extern for two US federal judges the opportunity to shadow alumni mentors as externs provides students with experience impossible to gain in the classroom Example sentencesExamples - She has already resumed her rigorous stollen-baking schedule, a regimen into which she was indoctrinated as an overworked extern at Bouley.
- This university program does not create an employment relationship between the extern and the sponsor.
- Opportunities for doing the skills lead the externs to higher levels of competency.
- If you were an extern at the French Laundry, your first job would most likely be peeling carrots.
- Sponsors and students should jointly determine the extern's role in his/her experience as well as the length of the externship.
- Each semester Justice Clark had three to five law students working for him as externs.
- What I and the two other externs didn't know was that each kitchen recruited and ‘bid’ for a particular extern.
- Each year up to six students will be chosen to work as paid summer externs.
- During that time, I took a break to serve as an extern on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.
- She worked as a judicial extern for two US federal judges as well as a trainee at the European Commission's Legal Service.
2(in a strictly enclosed order of nuns) a sister who does not live exclusively within the enclosure and goes on outside errands. (有时不住在修道院内的跑外差的)外勤修女 Example sentencesExamples - The two other externs, whose duties often prevented them from having time for silent meditation, had also chosen to remain.
- In the miniature society of the cloister, numbering between ten and eleven sisters and an extern or two, her success meets some of the same responses a successful worldly artist would find.
- These three sisters are the externs at the convent of St. Teresa in Coimbra where Sister Lucia lived for 57 years.
OriginMid 16th century (as an adjective in the sense ‘external’): from French externe or Latin externus, from exter ‘outer’. The word was used by Shakespeare to mean ‘outward appearance’; current noun senses date from the early 17th century. |