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Carambeí - PR, , Brazil
Auxiliar nas atividades gerais do setor da TI. Disponibilizar, orientar, conferir e atualizar planilhar pertinentes ao setor. Realizar atualização de documentos, conforme a necessidade do setor. Obter conhecimento do setor em que se encontra, fluxo de processos e analises. Esclarecer dúvidas em relação ao setor. Auxiliar nos programas multidisciplinares da unidade. Acompanhar os processos do setor. Informar os colaboradores dos avisos pertinentes ao setor. Participar de treinamentos obrigatórios e específicos oferecidos pela empresa. Cumprir os programas de qualidade e segurança implementados e as normas internas de empresa. Requisitos: Obrigatório estar cursando Ensino Superior na área da TI. Interesse em desenvolvimento e inovação. Facilidade em aprender novas tecnologias. Desejável conhecimento em lógica de programação. Disponibilidade para estagiar presencialmente em Carambeí. Boa comunicação para atendimento ao usuário. Formação: Ensino Superior Cursando na área de Tecnologia da Informação. Benefícios: Refeitório. Seguro de Vida. Transporte.
Formação Acadêmica:
Não informado
Salário:
A combinar
Cargo:
Estagiário
Empresa:
Frisia cooperativa agroindustrial
Empresa de produção agropecuária.
Ramo:
Agro-Indústria/ Pecuária/ Pesca
(DJ)
Empregos.com.br
Slangs & AI meanings
v. It means being ready for sex, or sexually stimulated. "Hey Baby, do you know what time it is? It’s tool time!" 2. v. Slang for smoking cheap marijuana. Comes from the practice of Mexican construction workers hiding in the tool shed while getting high. "Hey Pancho man, I need a little tool time, chico!"Â
adj./adv. an older term that still maintains its presence that means good or cool, hip. Also can mean close, like a close friendship. "Man . . . did you see that lowered Cadillac? It was tight!" 2. stingy or tightfisted. "Yo, your pops is tight. He's so cheap, even the Scrooge looks generous compared to him." 3. to get really intoxicated and or messed up on drugs. "Yo dawg, we got tight as hell last night."Â
a driving manuver where you drive your car slowly and swerve from the left to the right till the car appears like it's tipping from side to side. Â "You can catch me out on dem roads, tippin' on dem 44's."Â
adj round-trip ticket. As you probably know, it just means that youÂ’re planning on coming home again.
n pantyhose. I’m getting rather out of my depth here. Opaque, very thin women’s leggings and generally skin-coloured or black. “Tights” in the U.S. are generally coloured, thicker, more like leggings and rarely worn. All of this makes little difference to me because the only reason I’d ever think about buying either would be if I was considering a career in armed robbery.
adj very small; ickle. Perhaps slightly childish, but in common use in the U.K.: Well, the food was very nice, but the helpings were titchy!
adj 1 drunk: My mother-in-law seemed rather nice the first time I met her, but I could swear she was tight. 2 miserly. IÂ’m too tired to think of an example phrase, youÂ’ll have to make your own up.
n a demure, civilised drink. Usually of sherry, Martini or some other light spirit measure. You grandmother might acquiesce to a tipple before dinner. My grandmother, as it happens, acquiesced to several tipples before dinner, and a few after.
v unauthorised waste disposal – most often seen in signs declaring “no fly tipping” which have been hastily erected next to popular sites for dumping stuff. Originates from a time when houseflies were employed to remove garbage from the house, which they did using tiny little bags strapped to their legs. They would then fly in convoy to the fly tipping site and simultaneously unload their cargo, the whole event looking like a strange miniature reconstruction of the firebombing of Dresden. This, obviously, is a wholly incorrect etymology, but I can’t be bothered checking it. “But,” I hear you say, “The internet is just over there. Why don’t you just look?” Well, my web browser is closed. And my boss is coming.
adj a fine example of his/her gender: Did you see the tidy new bloke working in the sweet shop? Blokes rather like this word because it has a definite subtext suggesting dusting and hoovering.
n 1 check; check-mark. One of those little (usually handwritten) marks people put next to things to show that they’re correct. Not the X (that’s for wrong answers), the other one. 2 moment. A very short space of time, very much equivalent to the way “second” is used in conversation: Try and hold it on for the moment, I’ll be back in a tick once I’ve phoned an ambulance. No doubt derived from clock noises.
Slang for Crystal Meth. ""I'm looking for Tina.""Â
adj in a good state; going well: We spent all the weekend on our knees and the gardenÂ’s tickety-boo now!
1 n place in great disarray: Your flat is a complete tip! Derived I think from the British term rubbish tip, where one goes to tip rubbish. 2 a gratuity (universal).
n scalper. The people that hang around outside concert venues trying to sell second-hand tickets at vastly inflated prices. Everyone love to hate them, until they need them. To my mind, they perform two useful functions. First off, they create liquidity in the second-hand ticket market. And secondly, they give the rest of us someone to feel superior to in a kind of minor, petty way. ItÂ’s win-win.
n idle (of a car engine): It even overheats on tickover! ticking over idling.
n cash register. The device at the checkout of a shop upon which the assistant works out how much you have to pay, and which contains the money paid by other customers. That has to be the most long-winded and hapless definition I’ve written lately. The word “till” is used in the U.S. but refers to the removable drawer tray in the machine, not the whole device.
adj./adv. Under the influence of a controlled substance. "Hey I got that Bobby Brown. You can get yo "tight-eye" on dog!"Â
adj awry: As soon as the squirrel escaped the whole thing went tits up. Whilst the term originally referred to something which was dead (presumably derived from the orientation of said tits), itÂ’s evolved to mean anything in a poor shape.
adj high (on drugs): IÂ’ve no idea how she got up there, I was off my tits from about nine oÂ’clock onwards. Perhaps she jumped? Ah, you see, you thought I was going to copy-paste the previous entry again. Well, rest assured that I would have done had it meant the same thing.
ESTAGIARIO TI
v. It means being ready for sex, or sexually stimulated. "Hey Baby, do you know what time it is? It’s tool time!" 2. v. Slang for smoking cheap marijuana. Comes from the practice of Mexican construction workers hiding in the tool shed while getting high. "Hey Pancho man, I need a little tool time, chico!"Â
adj./adv. an older term that still maintains its presence that means good or cool, hip. Also can mean close, like a close friendship. "Man . . . did you see that lowered Cadillac? It was tight!" 2. stingy or tightfisted. "Yo, your pops is tight. He's so cheap, even the Scrooge looks generous compared to him." 3. to get really intoxicated and or messed up on drugs. "Yo dawg, we got tight as hell last night."Â
a driving manuver where you drive your car slowly and swerve from the left to the right till the car appears like it's tipping from side to side. Â "You can catch me out on dem roads, tippin' on dem 44's."Â
adj round-trip ticket. As you probably know, it just means that youÂ’re planning on coming home again.
n pantyhose. I’m getting rather out of my depth here. Opaque, very thin women’s leggings and generally skin-coloured or black. “Tights” in the U.S. are generally coloured, thicker, more like leggings and rarely worn. All of this makes little difference to me because the only reason I’d ever think about buying either would be if I was considering a career in armed robbery.
adj very small; ickle. Perhaps slightly childish, but in common use in the U.K.: Well, the food was very nice, but the helpings were titchy!
adj 1 drunk: My mother-in-law seemed rather nice the first time I met her, but I could swear she was tight. 2 miserly. IÂ’m too tired to think of an example phrase, youÂ’ll have to make your own up.
n a demure, civilised drink. Usually of sherry, Martini or some other light spirit measure. You grandmother might acquiesce to a tipple before dinner. My grandmother, as it happens, acquiesced to several tipples before dinner, and a few after.
v unauthorised waste disposal – most often seen in signs declaring “no fly tipping” which have been hastily erected next to popular sites for dumping stuff. Originates from a time when houseflies were employed to remove garbage from the house, which they did using tiny little bags strapped to their legs. They would then fly in convoy to the fly tipping site and simultaneously unload their cargo, the whole event looking like a strange miniature reconstruction of the firebombing of Dresden. This, obviously, is a wholly incorrect etymology, but I can’t be bothered checking it. “But,” I hear you say, “The internet is just over there. Why don’t you just look?” Well, my web browser is closed. And my boss is coming.
adj a fine example of his/her gender: Did you see the tidy new bloke working in the sweet shop? Blokes rather like this word because it has a definite subtext suggesting dusting and hoovering.
n 1 check; check-mark. One of those little (usually handwritten) marks people put next to things to show that they’re correct. Not the X (that’s for wrong answers), the other one. 2 moment. A very short space of time, very much equivalent to the way “second” is used in conversation: Try and hold it on for the moment, I’ll be back in a tick once I’ve phoned an ambulance. No doubt derived from clock noises.
Slang for Crystal Meth. ""I'm looking for Tina.""Â
adj in a good state; going well: We spent all the weekend on our knees and the gardenÂ’s tickety-boo now!
1 n place in great disarray: Your flat is a complete tip! Derived I think from the British term rubbish tip, where one goes to tip rubbish. 2 a gratuity (universal).
n scalper. The people that hang around outside concert venues trying to sell second-hand tickets at vastly inflated prices. Everyone love to hate them, until they need them. To my mind, they perform two useful functions. First off, they create liquidity in the second-hand ticket market. And secondly, they give the rest of us someone to feel superior to in a kind of minor, petty way. ItÂ’s win-win.
n idle (of a car engine): It even overheats on tickover! ticking over idling.
n cash register. The device at the checkout of a shop upon which the assistant works out how much you have to pay, and which contains the money paid by other customers. That has to be the most long-winded and hapless definition I’ve written lately. The word “till” is used in the U.S. but refers to the removable drawer tray in the machine, not the whole device.
adj./adv. Under the influence of a controlled substance. "Hey I got that Bobby Brown. You can get yo "tight-eye" on dog!"Â
adj awry: As soon as the squirrel escaped the whole thing went tits up. Whilst the term originally referred to something which was dead (presumably derived from the orientation of said tits), itÂ’s evolved to mean anything in a poor shape.
adj high (on drugs): IÂ’ve no idea how she got up there, I was off my tits from about nine oÂ’clock onwards. Perhaps she jumped? Ah, you see, you thought I was going to copy-paste the previous entry again. Well, rest assured that I would have done had it meant the same thing.
ESTAGIARIO TI