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  • Comptable général H/F
  • Nancy, Grand Est, France

    Comptable général H/F

    Nancy, Grand Est, France
    Hays France
    Temps plein

    Notre client, entreprise multisites du secteur tertiaire, bien implantée dans la région et au fonctionnement familial, cherche à recruter son Comptable général dans le cadre d'une création de poste.Au sein de ce groupe à l'environnement familial et rattaché à la Responsable comptable, vous intervene...

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    Apply now: Comptable général H/F

Online Slangs & meanings of slangs

Slangs & AI meanings

  • HF
  • HF

    High frequency. A method of long-range radio broadcast.

  • W.C.
  • W.C.

    n toilet. A currently-used acronym which stands for the not-so-currently used term “water closet.” This term stems from a time early in toilet development when they were nothing more than a carefully waterproofed cupboard filled halfway up with seawater. Not to be confused with a “W.P.C.” (Woman Police Constable).

  • HF
  • HF

    Hello Friend -or- Have Fun -or- Have Faith

  • caser/case
  • caser/case

    five shillings (5/-), a crown coin. Seems to have surfaced first as caser in Australia in the mid-1800s from the Yiddish (Jewish European/Hebrew dialect) kesef meaning silver, where (in Australia) it also meant a five year prison term. Caser was slang also for a US dollar coin, and the US/Autralian slang logically transferred to English, either or all because of the reference to silver coin, dollar slang for a crown, or the comparable value, as was.

  • copper
  • copper

    n policeman. May come from the copper buttons policemen originally wore on their uniforms; may also be derived from the Latin “capere,” which means “to capture.” In turn, the American word “cop” may be derived from copper, although may equally easily be an abbreviation for “Constable on Patrol” or “Constable of the Police.” There. I don’t think I committed to anything.

  • gnarl
  • gnarl

    n. extreme technical sections. Characterized by very rough, rooty, slippery, or rocky sections. Commonly found in the Pacific Northwest and New England. "He has got some great bike handling skills and can really scream through the gnarl."

  • nick, the
  • nick, the

    This has regular usage in the UK for prison or police station cells. Variations include 'nicked', as in arrested eg."He was nicked last night for burglary.", "You"re nicked son!!", "Nick him as well constable". Also has become used to refer t osomthing stolem, as in "I just nicked this tv set from the house over the road." Why is this Aston martin so cheap. Is it nicked??"

  • Steve Claridge
  • Steve Claridge

    Garage. I've just gotta go down the Steve for some petrol . It helps if you realize that garage, which commonly rhymes with mirage in North America, more usually rhymes with carriage in Britain. A great Tony Hancock piece has him trying to act all condescending and pronouncing it the American way, confusing the ears off a local constable. Steve Claridge is a venerable striker, late of Leicester.

Online Slangs & meanings of the slang Comptable général H/F

Comptable général H/F

  • HF
  • HF

    High frequency. A method of long-range radio broadcast.

  • W.C.
  • W.C.

    n toilet. A currently-used acronym which stands for the not-so-currently used term “water closet.” This term stems from a time early in toilet development when they were nothing more than a carefully waterproofed cupboard filled halfway up with seawater. Not to be confused with a “W.P.C.” (Woman Police Constable).

  • HF
  • HF

    Hello Friend -or- Have Fun -or- Have Faith

  • caser/case
  • caser/case

    five shillings (5/-), a crown coin. Seems to have surfaced first as caser in Australia in the mid-1800s from the Yiddish (Jewish European/Hebrew dialect) kesef meaning silver, where (in Australia) it also meant a five year prison term. Caser was slang also for a US dollar coin, and the US/Autralian slang logically transferred to English, either or all because of the reference to silver coin, dollar slang for a crown, or the comparable value, as was.

  • copper
  • copper

    n policeman. May come from the copper buttons policemen originally wore on their uniforms; may also be derived from the Latin “capere,” which means “to capture.” In turn, the American word “cop” may be derived from copper, although may equally easily be an abbreviation for “Constable on Patrol” or “Constable of the Police.” There. I don’t think I committed to anything.

  • gnarl
  • gnarl

    n. extreme technical sections. Characterized by very rough, rooty, slippery, or rocky sections. Commonly found in the Pacific Northwest and New England. "He has got some great bike handling skills and can really scream through the gnarl."

  • nick, the
  • nick, the

    This has regular usage in the UK for prison or police station cells. Variations include 'nicked', as in arrested eg."He was nicked last night for burglary.", "You"re nicked son!!", "Nick him as well constable". Also has become used to refer t osomthing stolem, as in "I just nicked this tv set from the house over the road." Why is this Aston martin so cheap. Is it nicked??"

  • Steve Claridge
  • Steve Claridge

    Garage. I've just gotta go down the Steve for some petrol . It helps if you realize that garage, which commonly rhymes with mirage in North America, more usually rhymes with carriage in Britain. A great Tony Hancock piece has him trying to act all condescending and pronouncing it the American way, confusing the ears off a local constable. Steve Claridge is a venerable striker, late of Leicester.

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Comptable général H/F