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单词 unemployable
释义

Definition of unemployable in English:

unemployable

adjectiveʌnɛmˈplɔɪəb(ə)lʌnɪmˈplɔɪəb(ə)lˌənəmˈplɔɪəb(ə)l
  • (of a person) not able or likely to get paid employment because of a lack of skills or qualifications.

    (因缺乏技能等)不能被雇佣的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • He hires all his unemployable comedy friends and we're supposed to chuckle along with their camaraderie, as though paying eight bucks makes us eligible to be in on the in-jokes.
    • There will always be people who are unemployable no matter what help you offer.
    • Economies in most of the region continue to deteriorate, complicated by a high birthrate which is generating huge numbers of unemployable young men.
    • Burt Reynolds was the top box-office attraction in the late 1970s and virtually unemployable a decade later.
    • The team talk about how to hold on to your job when you know you're not performing and you're terrified that getting help will not only get you fired anyway but make you unemployable in the future.
    • For the most part they have lingered this long on the dole because they are the least skilled and the most unemployable of the nation's welfare recipients.
    • Now, a former professor of Communism is utterly unemployable.
    • In other words, because so many leave school practically unemployable, it's not surprising there is such a huge pay gap between them and the university-educated elite.
    • Anyone - Hindu, Muslim or Sikh - who is educated in one of those small-minded, sectarian schools that religious institutions run will find himself, at the end of his education, almost unemployable.
    • Never mind that women's liberation also released men from the responsibility of marrying young and supporting unemployable wives.
    • If your child grows up to be an unemployable slob, he will be an economic burden on the family.
    • Now that paid annual leave is customary they would seem to have served their purpose, while for the retired, the unemployed and the unemployable they are irrelevant.
    • Turning recreational drug users into unemployable ex-cons is not a good use of tax dollars.
    • The new South Africa is confronted by the spectre of an ever-expanding army of unemployed and unemployable youth.
    • For example, if the powers that be want to disenfranchise you or make you unemployable, that's one sure way to do it.
    • I may be a graduate of the noble and downright unemployable subject of Drama, but even I draw the line at mime artists.
    • The listening test features unemployable actors or robots reading out unnatural sentences in plodding monotones, or with inflections in the wrong places.
    • Everything I knew about psychology, of human nature, indicated that they wouldn't fall for it - I'd be discovered straight away, and forever be cast into unemployable obscurity.
    • The only question left was which of these Tinsel Town elites would ruin their expensive designer clothes to jump into a giant pond to save an unemployable actor?
    • We are creating skip loads of new jobs every year but because something has gone badly wrong in the skilling department, we have an army of unemployable people walking the streets.
nounʌnɛmˈplɔɪəb(ə)lʌnɪmˈplɔɪəb(ə)lˌənəmˈplɔɪəb(ə)l
  • An unemployable person.

    不能被雇佣的人

    an underclass of unemployables
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The new divide is between us and the unemployables.
    • The blacklist was officially on, or, rather, unofficially on, since there was no authoritative list of unemployables.
    • Vibrancy and celebratoriness are of course two important parts of the payroll vote industry giving a wage, if not quite employment, to the otherwise unemployables with media studies certificates so some purpose is served.
    • Our education system is producing unemployables.
    • Will screening create a new underclass of the uninsurable and the unemployable?

Derivatives

  • unemployability

  • nounʌnɪmplɔɪəˈbɪlɪtiʌnɛmplɔɪəˈbɪlɪti
    • How can these qualities translate into unemployability?
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Well, here the men are, and it is ludicrous to attribute their joblessness to corporate bigotry, rather than to their own unemployability.
      • In fact, he offered no medical evidence at all to support his sweeping, general assertions of disability and unemployability.
      • A good example of this is the condition of unemployability that comes from chronic long periods of unemployment.
      • These young people who do not go abroad to study, and do not have the appropriate skills and literacy or marketable job skills are caught in a wasteland of unemployability.

Definition of unemployable in US English:

unemployable

adjectiveˌənəmˈplɔɪəb(ə)lˌənəmˈploiəb(ə)l
  • (of a person) not able or likely to get paid employment because of a lack of skills or qualifications.

    (因缺乏技能等)不能被雇佣的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Everything I knew about psychology, of human nature, indicated that they wouldn't fall for it - I'd be discovered straight away, and forever be cast into unemployable obscurity.
    • There will always be people who are unemployable no matter what help you offer.
    • Now, a former professor of Communism is utterly unemployable.
    • Economies in most of the region continue to deteriorate, complicated by a high birthrate which is generating huge numbers of unemployable young men.
    • The only question left was which of these Tinsel Town elites would ruin their expensive designer clothes to jump into a giant pond to save an unemployable actor?
    • If your child grows up to be an unemployable slob, he will be an economic burden on the family.
    • The team talk about how to hold on to your job when you know you're not performing and you're terrified that getting help will not only get you fired anyway but make you unemployable in the future.
    • We are creating skip loads of new jobs every year but because something has gone badly wrong in the skilling department, we have an army of unemployable people walking the streets.
    • In other words, because so many leave school practically unemployable, it's not surprising there is such a huge pay gap between them and the university-educated elite.
    • He hires all his unemployable comedy friends and we're supposed to chuckle along with their camaraderie, as though paying eight bucks makes us eligible to be in on the in-jokes.
    • The listening test features unemployable actors or robots reading out unnatural sentences in plodding monotones, or with inflections in the wrong places.
    • Turning recreational drug users into unemployable ex-cons is not a good use of tax dollars.
    • Never mind that women's liberation also released men from the responsibility of marrying young and supporting unemployable wives.
    • Anyone - Hindu, Muslim or Sikh - who is educated in one of those small-minded, sectarian schools that religious institutions run will find himself, at the end of his education, almost unemployable.
    • I may be a graduate of the noble and downright unemployable subject of Drama, but even I draw the line at mime artists.
    • Now that paid annual leave is customary they would seem to have served their purpose, while for the retired, the unemployed and the unemployable they are irrelevant.
    • For example, if the powers that be want to disenfranchise you or make you unemployable, that's one sure way to do it.
    • Burt Reynolds was the top box-office attraction in the late 1970s and virtually unemployable a decade later.
    • For the most part they have lingered this long on the dole because they are the least skilled and the most unemployable of the nation's welfare recipients.
    • The new South Africa is confronted by the spectre of an ever-expanding army of unemployed and unemployable youth.
nounˌənəmˈplɔɪəb(ə)lˌənəmˈploiəb(ə)l
  • An unemployable person.

    不能被雇佣的人

    an underclass of unemployables
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Will screening create a new underclass of the uninsurable and the unemployable?
    • Our education system is producing unemployables.
    • The new divide is between us and the unemployables.
    • Vibrancy and celebratoriness are of course two important parts of the payroll vote industry giving a wage, if not quite employment, to the otherwise unemployables with media studies certificates so some purpose is served.
    • The blacklist was officially on, or, rather, unofficially on, since there was no authoritative list of unemployables.
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更新时间:2024/11/11 7:43:25