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  • SOUSTRUŽNÍK (45.000 - 49.000 Kč)
  • Plzeň, Plzeňský, Czechia

    SOUSTRUŽNÍK (45.000 - 49.000 Kč)

    SOUSTRUŽNÍK (45.000 - 49.000 Kč)
    45000 - 49000 Kč
    mzdové ohodnocení
    Plzeň-město
    Máte zkušenosti s obráběním velkých dílů? Umíte programovat v systému FANUC? Hledáte práci s volnými víkendy? Pokud ano, pak je tato pozice právě pro Vás! Stabilní výrobní společnost hledá posilu na pozici SOUSTRUŽNÍK (45.000 - 49.000 Kč)!
    Pracovní náplň

    Obsluha a programování CNC soustruhu (systém FANUC)
    Práce s výkresovou dokumentací a měřidly
    Spolupráce s kolegy v čistém a moderním prostředí
    Co požadujeme?

    Praxi v oblasti těžkého obrábění
    Znalost systému FANUC a schopnost programování
    Pečlivost a schopnost číst technickou dokumentaci
    Co nabízíme?

    Zkrácená pracovní doba
    Dotované stravování
    25 dní dovolené + sick days
    Flexipassy
    Možnost vzdělávání a jazykových kurzů
    Dotované penzijní připojištění
    Místo výkonu práce: Plzeň
    Další informace

    Advantage Consulting

    Apply now: SOUSTRUŽNÍK (45.000 - 49.000 Kč)

Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • outie 5000
  • outie 5000

    n. (derived from "outa here" mixed with the car the Audi 5000) A saying conveying that a person is about to depart. As if to say "time to leave!" Some shorten it and just say "5000!" **Also see Audi or Audi 5.O  "Jesse . . . we're outtie 5000!" 

  • BUGGIN
  • BUGGIN

    1- To dissect a knowledge situation or concept, and explain it in a simple format 2- to get down in  any aspect of culture, especially dance. (exam. "at the zulu jam DJ AFRICA BAMBATTA played F 4000 and FABEL started breakin it down on the floor")

  • kick the bucket
  • kick the bucket

    v die. I am going to assume that this refers to an important part of the hanging-yourself procedure if you donÂ’t happen to have a chair. Somewhat informal, as you might have guessed: Jimmy says he canÂ’t buy a car until his grandmother kicks the bucket.

  • khasi
  • khasi

    n pron. “kah-zee” toilet: I’m away to the khasi to drain the lizard. Less likely in more refined conversation: Excuse me, madam - could you direct me to the khasi? It may be derived from Arabic. This might not be true. People lie to me all the time.

  • Stanley knife
  • Stanley knife

    n box cutter. The small retractable knives used for cutting up cardboard boxes and hijacking aircraft. In the U.K., these are mostly manufactured by a company called Stanley. The knives, not aircraft.

  • knickers
  • knickers

    n women’s underpants. In old-fashioned English and American English, “knickers” (an abbreviation of the Dutch-derived word “knickerbockers”) are knee-length trousers most often seen nowadays on golfers.

  • knock about
  • knock about

    n sport practise: Jimmy and I are taking the football to the park for a knockabout.

  • kitchen roll
  • kitchen roll

    n paper towel. The disposable paper cloth, much akin to a larger, stronger version of toilet paper, that one generally keeps in the kitchen and uses to mop up bits of food and drink that have been inadvertently thrown around. So called, I’d imagine, because Brits keep it in the kitchen and it comes on a roll. Americans call it “paper towel,” no doubt because it’s made of paper and works like a towel.

  • Kirby grip
  • Kirby grip

    n Bobby pin. The little pins you poke in your hair to keep it in place.

  • knees-up
  • knees-up

    n party. A rather antiquated word. A knees-up is more likely to involve some post-menopausal ladies singing around a piano than a bunch of bright young things doing lines off the coffee table.

  • Audi 5000
  • Audi 5000

    verb. Meaning to leave now, depart quickly. Iam Audi 5000 (I am outa here, I am leaving right now). Orginated during the period when Audi 5000s were experience sudden and unexpected excellerations.

  • knock up
  • knock up

    v bang upon someone’s door, generally to get them out of bed: OK, g’night - can you knock me up in the morning? In U.S. English, “knocking someone up” means getting them pregnant. Although most Brits will feign innocence, they do know the U.S. connotations of the phrase and it adds greatly to the enjoyment of using it. Both Brits and Americans share the term “knocking off,” to mean various other things.

  • kickabout
  • kickabout

    n football practice: Mum, Jimmy and I are just going down the park for a kickabout!

  • knackered
  • knackered

    adj very tired; beat. The “knacker’s yard” was once a place where old horses were converted into glue.

  • BUGGIN
  • BUGGIN

    1- To dissect a knowledge situation or concept, and explain it in a simple format 2- to get down in  any aspect of culture, especially dance. (exam. "at the zulu jam DJ AFRICA BAMBATTA played F 4000 and FABEL started breakin it down on the floor")

  • kit
  • kit

    n sports uniform (e.g. rugby kit, football kit). More generally in the U.K., kit refers to the equipment necessary to perform a particular task - usually, though not always, sporting. The boundary is woolly to such a degree that it’s difficult to generalise - I’ve heard all sorts of things from parachutes to computers referred to as “kit.” nice piece of kit an item particularly good at performing its task in hand. Again it could refer to pretty much anything, though I think you’d be more likely to describe your new camera as a nice piece of kit than, say, your fiancé.

  • Kiwi
  • Kiwi

    n New Zealander: We tried this other bar but it was full of drunk Kiwis. Also an abbreviated name for a Kiwifruit.

  • knob
  • knob

    also occasionally “nob” 1 n penis. As well as referring to the part of the body, it can be used as an insult. 2 v screw; bone. This implies active use of said penis and is similar to “shag.” This word appears regularly in American place names, much to the amusement of Brits. Two British favourites are Bald Knob, Arkansas and Knob Lick, Missouri.

  • kip
  • kip

    n sleep: IÂ’m just off home for an hour for some kip. ItÂ’s a Dutch word meaning a rather run-down place to sleep.

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang SOUSTRUŽNÍK (45.000 - 49.000 Kč)

SOUSTRUŽNÍK (45.000 - 49.000 Kč)

  • outie 5000
  • outie 5000

    n. (derived from "outa here" mixed with the car the Audi 5000) A saying conveying that a person is about to depart. As if to say "time to leave!" Some shorten it and just say "5000!" **Also see Audi or Audi 5.O  "Jesse . . . we're outtie 5000!" 

  • BUGGIN
  • BUGGIN

    1- To dissect a knowledge situation or concept, and explain it in a simple format 2- to get down in  any aspect of culture, especially dance. (exam. "at the zulu jam DJ AFRICA BAMBATTA played F 4000 and FABEL started breakin it down on the floor")

  • kick the bucket
  • kick the bucket

    v die. I am going to assume that this refers to an important part of the hanging-yourself procedure if you donÂ’t happen to have a chair. Somewhat informal, as you might have guessed: Jimmy says he canÂ’t buy a car until his grandmother kicks the bucket.

  • khasi
  • khasi

    n pron. “kah-zee” toilet: I’m away to the khasi to drain the lizard. Less likely in more refined conversation: Excuse me, madam - could you direct me to the khasi? It may be derived from Arabic. This might not be true. People lie to me all the time.

  • Stanley knife
  • Stanley knife

    n box cutter. The small retractable knives used for cutting up cardboard boxes and hijacking aircraft. In the U.K., these are mostly manufactured by a company called Stanley. The knives, not aircraft.

  • knickers
  • knickers

    n women’s underpants. In old-fashioned English and American English, “knickers” (an abbreviation of the Dutch-derived word “knickerbockers”) are knee-length trousers most often seen nowadays on golfers.

  • knock about
  • knock about

    n sport practise: Jimmy and I are taking the football to the park for a knockabout.

  • kitchen roll
  • kitchen roll

    n paper towel. The disposable paper cloth, much akin to a larger, stronger version of toilet paper, that one generally keeps in the kitchen and uses to mop up bits of food and drink that have been inadvertently thrown around. So called, I’d imagine, because Brits keep it in the kitchen and it comes on a roll. Americans call it “paper towel,” no doubt because it’s made of paper and works like a towel.

  • Kirby grip
  • Kirby grip

    n Bobby pin. The little pins you poke in your hair to keep it in place.

  • knees-up
  • knees-up

    n party. A rather antiquated word. A knees-up is more likely to involve some post-menopausal ladies singing around a piano than a bunch of bright young things doing lines off the coffee table.

  • Audi 5000
  • Audi 5000

    verb. Meaning to leave now, depart quickly. Iam Audi 5000 (I am outa here, I am leaving right now). Orginated during the period when Audi 5000s were experience sudden and unexpected excellerations.

  • knock up
  • knock up

    v bang upon someone’s door, generally to get them out of bed: OK, g’night - can you knock me up in the morning? In U.S. English, “knocking someone up” means getting them pregnant. Although most Brits will feign innocence, they do know the U.S. connotations of the phrase and it adds greatly to the enjoyment of using it. Both Brits and Americans share the term “knocking off,” to mean various other things.

  • kickabout
  • kickabout

    n football practice: Mum, Jimmy and I are just going down the park for a kickabout!

  • knackered
  • knackered

    adj very tired; beat. The “knacker’s yard” was once a place where old horses were converted into glue.

  • BUGGIN
  • BUGGIN

    1- To dissect a knowledge situation or concept, and explain it in a simple format 2- to get down in  any aspect of culture, especially dance. (exam. "at the zulu jam DJ AFRICA BAMBATTA played F 4000 and FABEL started breakin it down on the floor")

  • kit
  • kit

    n sports uniform (e.g. rugby kit, football kit). More generally in the U.K., kit refers to the equipment necessary to perform a particular task - usually, though not always, sporting. The boundary is woolly to such a degree that it’s difficult to generalise - I’ve heard all sorts of things from parachutes to computers referred to as “kit.” nice piece of kit an item particularly good at performing its task in hand. Again it could refer to pretty much anything, though I think you’d be more likely to describe your new camera as a nice piece of kit than, say, your fiancé.

  • Kiwi
  • Kiwi

    n New Zealander: We tried this other bar but it was full of drunk Kiwis. Also an abbreviated name for a Kiwifruit.

  • knob
  • knob

    also occasionally “nob” 1 n penis. As well as referring to the part of the body, it can be used as an insult. 2 v screw; bone. This implies active use of said penis and is similar to “shag.” This word appears regularly in American place names, much to the amusement of Brits. Two British favourites are Bald Knob, Arkansas and Knob Lick, Missouri.

  • kip
  • kip

    n sleep: IÂ’m just off home for an hour for some kip. ItÂ’s a Dutch word meaning a rather run-down place to sleep.

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SOUSTRUŽNÍK (45.000 - 49.000 Kč)