AI & ChatGPT job searches for Praktikant (m/w) Service

Jobs Praktikant (m/w) Service. jobs for Praktikant (m/w) Service

Jobs Praktikant (m/w) Service!

Jobs

Jobs & AI searches

  • Praktikant (m/w) Service
  • Stans, Nidwalden, Switzerland

    Praktikant (m/w) Service

    Stans, Nidwalden, Schweiz
    Aiola al porto
    Vollzeit

    .

    Einleitung


    Für unser Restaurant Aiola suchen wir nach Vereinbarung motivierte, kreative Praktikanten im Service

    TLNT1_CH

    Wir bieten


    Wir bieten:

    Moderner Arbeitsplatz in Zentrum
    Offenheit für Kreativität und neue Ideen
    Innovatives Arbeitsumfeld
    Diesen Job melden
    Bewerben

    Apply now: Praktikant (m/w) Service

Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • Drumhead service
  • Drumhead service

    A religious service where fallen comrades are remembered and mourned.

  • casual
  • casual

    n Scottish bad egg, nogoodnik. Pretty close Scottish equivalent to “yob,” with the notable exception that casuals will actually refer to themselves as such while yobs certainly would not. Dotted around Edinburgh is graffiti advertising the services of the “Craiglockart Casual Squad.” Craiglockart isn’t one of the worst areas of Edinburgh, so perhaps their modus operandi is to turn up and insult your intelligence, or throw truffles through your windows.

  • WESPAC
  • WESPAC

    Navy and Coast Guard terms for Western Pacific operations, which extended to the Asian Pacific. A WESPAC tour, then, was a tour of duty in the Western Pacific, generally synonomous with service in/around Vietnam.

  • LIP SERVICE
  • LIP SERVICE

    Lip service is slang for fellatio.

  • anti-clockwise
  • anti-clockwise

    adv rotation in a direction which isn’t clockwise (as, well, the phrase suggests). Americans will know this better as “counter-clockwise.” Of course, anyone with half a brain could have worked this out themselves but never let it be said that we’re only paying lip-service to completeness.

  • Bill
  • Bill

    n the police, in the same sort of a way as “Plod.” There are two possible etymologies: The first, that it’s after William Wilberforce, a Member of Parliament who first proposed a U.K. police service. The second, that all police cars originally had the letters “BYL” in their number plates. The Bill is also a popular U.K. television drama about a police station.

  • CS
  • CS

    Composite Service. Also, riot control gas agent, such as a CS-grenade, used widely to clear out enemy tunnel works. Also, a type of tear gas. Pg. 508

  • GMG1
  • GMG1

    Gunner's Mate Guns Class Petty Officer or just GMGFirst Class, which is the same as an E-6 in any service.

  • quid
  • quid

    n pound (currency). Quid is to “pound” what “buck” is to “dollar.” The word is very widely recognised and socially acceptable but informal - you could quite easily say: “Well, they offered me ten thousand quid for the car” but you wouldn’t hear any BBC announcers reporting: “The government today authorised a ten million quid increase in health service funding.” This perhaps says more about the BBC than this one particular word, but I digress.

  • USO
  • USO

    United Service Organization.

  • willie
  • willie

    n penis. The film Free Willie attracted large optimistic female audiences when it was released in the U.K. That could either mean audiences of large optimistic females, or large audiences of optimistic females. Either way itÂ’s a lie. Of perhaps more amusement to Brits was the 1985 American film Goonies, which featured a group of children who found a secret pirate-ship commanded by a fearsome pirate named One-Eyed-Willie. Or how about the Alaskan car-wash company, Wet Willies, who offer two levels of service named Little Willie and Big Willie? Seems something of a no-brainer.

  • VIETNAM SERVICE MEDAL
  • VIETNAM SERVICE MEDAL

    (front and back)

  • OSS
  • OSS

    Office of Strategic Services. Created in 1942, the OSS was an intelligence-gathering operation which became a forerunner of the CIA. Pg. 517

  • It has triple meaning to Marines
  • It has triple meaning to Marines

    1. to snuff is the mission, 2. we don't grunt under our loads, and 3. a wry reference to the historical willingness of Marine leaders to expend their lives for what may seem like small gains (arising from the fact that this small service just doesn't have the logistical ability to throw much ordnance on an objective beforehand).

  • SERVICE
  • SERVICE

    Service is slang for sexual intercourse.

  • car boot sale
  • car boot sale

    n merry event where people get together in a field and sell the rubbish from their attic, under the secret suspicion that some part of it might turn out to be splendidly valuable. Not entirely dissimilar to a jumble sale. The term stems no doubt from the fact that this is normally carried out using the boot of your car as a headquarters. This sort of nonsense is now largely replaced by eBay, where you can sell the 1950s engraved brass Hitler moustache replica your father was awarded for twenty yearsÂ’ service in the post office without actually having to meet the freak who bought it.

  • Blow me
  • Blow me

    When an English colleague of mine exclaimed "Blow Me" in front of a large American audience, he brought the house down. It is simply an exclamation of surprise, short for "Blow me down", meaning something like I am so surprised you could knock me over just by blowing. Similar to "Well knock me down with a feather". It is not a request for services to be performed.

  • DIY
  • DIY

    This is short for do it yourself and applies not just to the DIY stores but also to anything that you need to do yourself. For example, if we get really bad service in a restaurant (oh, you noticed!) then we might ask the waiter if it is a DIY restaurant - just to wind them up.

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang Praktikant (m/w) Service

Praktikant (m/w) Service

  • Drumhead service
  • Drumhead service

    A religious service where fallen comrades are remembered and mourned.

  • casual
  • casual

    n Scottish bad egg, nogoodnik. Pretty close Scottish equivalent to “yob,” with the notable exception that casuals will actually refer to themselves as such while yobs certainly would not. Dotted around Edinburgh is graffiti advertising the services of the “Craiglockart Casual Squad.” Craiglockart isn’t one of the worst areas of Edinburgh, so perhaps their modus operandi is to turn up and insult your intelligence, or throw truffles through your windows.

  • WESPAC
  • WESPAC

    Navy and Coast Guard terms for Western Pacific operations, which extended to the Asian Pacific. A WESPAC tour, then, was a tour of duty in the Western Pacific, generally synonomous with service in/around Vietnam.

  • LIP SERVICE
  • LIP SERVICE

    Lip service is slang for fellatio.

  • anti-clockwise
  • anti-clockwise

    adv rotation in a direction which isn’t clockwise (as, well, the phrase suggests). Americans will know this better as “counter-clockwise.” Of course, anyone with half a brain could have worked this out themselves but never let it be said that we’re only paying lip-service to completeness.

  • Bill
  • Bill

    n the police, in the same sort of a way as “Plod.” There are two possible etymologies: The first, that it’s after William Wilberforce, a Member of Parliament who first proposed a U.K. police service. The second, that all police cars originally had the letters “BYL” in their number plates. The Bill is also a popular U.K. television drama about a police station.

  • CS
  • CS

    Composite Service. Also, riot control gas agent, such as a CS-grenade, used widely to clear out enemy tunnel works. Also, a type of tear gas. Pg. 508

  • GMG1
  • GMG1

    Gunner's Mate Guns Class Petty Officer or just GMGFirst Class, which is the same as an E-6 in any service.

  • quid
  • quid

    n pound (currency). Quid is to “pound” what “buck” is to “dollar.” The word is very widely recognised and socially acceptable but informal - you could quite easily say: “Well, they offered me ten thousand quid for the car” but you wouldn’t hear any BBC announcers reporting: “The government today authorised a ten million quid increase in health service funding.” This perhaps says more about the BBC than this one particular word, but I digress.

  • USO
  • USO

    United Service Organization.

  • willie
  • willie

    n penis. The film Free Willie attracted large optimistic female audiences when it was released in the U.K. That could either mean audiences of large optimistic females, or large audiences of optimistic females. Either way itÂ’s a lie. Of perhaps more amusement to Brits was the 1985 American film Goonies, which featured a group of children who found a secret pirate-ship commanded by a fearsome pirate named One-Eyed-Willie. Or how about the Alaskan car-wash company, Wet Willies, who offer two levels of service named Little Willie and Big Willie? Seems something of a no-brainer.

  • VIETNAM SERVICE MEDAL
  • VIETNAM SERVICE MEDAL

    (front and back)

  • OSS
  • OSS

    Office of Strategic Services. Created in 1942, the OSS was an intelligence-gathering operation which became a forerunner of the CIA. Pg. 517

  • It has triple meaning to Marines
  • It has triple meaning to Marines

    1. to snuff is the mission, 2. we don't grunt under our loads, and 3. a wry reference to the historical willingness of Marine leaders to expend their lives for what may seem like small gains (arising from the fact that this small service just doesn't have the logistical ability to throw much ordnance on an objective beforehand).

  • SERVICE
  • SERVICE

    Service is slang for sexual intercourse.

  • car boot sale
  • car boot sale

    n merry event where people get together in a field and sell the rubbish from their attic, under the secret suspicion that some part of it might turn out to be splendidly valuable. Not entirely dissimilar to a jumble sale. The term stems no doubt from the fact that this is normally carried out using the boot of your car as a headquarters. This sort of nonsense is now largely replaced by eBay, where you can sell the 1950s engraved brass Hitler moustache replica your father was awarded for twenty yearsÂ’ service in the post office without actually having to meet the freak who bought it.

  • Blow me
  • Blow me

    When an English colleague of mine exclaimed "Blow Me" in front of a large American audience, he brought the house down. It is simply an exclamation of surprise, short for "Blow me down", meaning something like I am so surprised you could knock me over just by blowing. Similar to "Well knock me down with a feather". It is not a request for services to be performed.

  • DIY
  • DIY

    This is short for do it yourself and applies not just to the DIY stores but also to anything that you need to do yourself. For example, if we get really bad service in a restaurant (oh, you noticed!) then we might ask the waiter if it is a DIY restaurant - just to wind them up.

Wiki AI search on online names & meanings containing

Praktikant (m/w) Service