Jobs ENGINEERING APPRENTICE. jobs for ENGINEERING APPRENTICE
Jobs ENGINEERING APPRENTICE!Local jobs, jobs near me
Jobs in : West Midlands United Kingdom
Jobs in : United Kingdom United Kingdom
Geoenvironmental Engineer Engineering Geologist
Geoenvironmental Engineer Engineering Geologist
Jobs in : Berkshire United Kingdom
Jobs in : Norfolk United Kingdom
Jobs in : Devon United Kingdom
Jobs at: Elix Sourcing Solutions
Jobs in : Manchester United Kingdom
Jobs at: Pioneer Selection Ltd
Jobs in : Northamptonshire United Kingdom
Graduate Engineering Geologist Monitoring Technician
Graduate Engineering Geologist Monitoring Technician
Jobs in : Hertfordshire United Kingdom
Jobs in : London United Kingdom
Jobs in : Louisville Kentucky United States
Engineering Geologist/Geo-environmental Engineer
Engineering Geologist/Geo-environmental Engineer
Jobs in : Devon United Kingdom
Jobs in : Leicestershire United Kingdom
Jobs at: Euro Projects Recruitment
Jobs in : Leicestershire United Kingdom
Project Engineering Assistant Manager
Project Engineering Assistant Manager
Jobs in : Yeniceoba Konya Turkey
Jobs in : North Yorkshire United Kingdom
Jobs in : Cornwall United Kingdom
Recruitment Consultant - Engineering & Construction
Recruitment Consultant - Engineering & Construction
Jobs in : London United Kingdom
Jobs in : United Kingdom United Kingdom
Jobs at: Minstrell Engineering
Jobs in : West Yorkshire United Kingdom
Slangs & AI meanings
A person that works in the engineering spaces.
Miscellaneous anything. eg. "On the port we have the Deck Department, on the Starboard we have the Engineering Department, and midships we have the Odds and Sods."
An engineering term meaning that the engines are completely shut down.
Any engineering-department man
1. During the 17th century, a naval rating for an experienced seaman. 2. From the 18th century, a naval commissioned officer candidate. 3. From the 1790s, an apprentice naval officer. 4. From the 19th century, an officer cadet at a naval academy. 5. In contemporary RCN usage, the term is sometimes used for a second year Naval Cadet.
A signaling system linking bridge and main engineering control; used to command engine speeds.
n. a pimp in training; a pimp apprentice. "Did you see them pimpershcnaps trying to talk to Sheila and Tasha after school?"Â
A member of the Marine Engineering Branch who attended the St. Lawrence College (or equivalent) Marine Engineering Programme, entering the two-year course as a recruit and exiting as a Master Seaman.
A common name (mainly used by members of the Engineering branch) given as an insult to members of other trades. It was originally a name given to an Ordinary Seaman Stokers who's only job in the Engine Room or Boiler Room was to wipe up oil leaks off the deck.
Canadian Forces Naval Engineering School.
Marine Engineering Mechanic, Technician, or Artificer. The term stoker derives from the days of coal-fired boilers and steam engines.
The engineering crew of the vessel, i.e., crewmembers who work in the vessel's engine room, fire room, and boiler room, so called because they would be covered in coal dust during the days of coal-fired steamships. To be more politically correct the term has now been shifted to "Black-Hand Gang".
Engineering technician.
A report from the Engineering Department that the main propulsion is ready for engine orders.
(sometimes pronounced “Blang-Blangâ€Â) Used to be jewelry such as silver, platinum, or diamonds and sometimes gold. Now the word expands to describe extremely expensive style of clothes, cars and general life-style. "Did you see Donald Trump’s house in The Apprentice- I’ve never seen so much bling bling!" or "Jose’s blinging it!" Lyrical reference: BIRDMAN, LIL' WAYNE LYRICS - Over Here Hustlin' "Bling bling king nigga, money ain't a thing..."Â
The mythical final commemorative rivet which completes a ship, an idea doubtlessly adapted from the "golden spike" that was driven at the completion of the transcontinental railroad. On a naval ship, the normal folklore is that the special rivet is found in the depths of the engineering spaces, usually somewhere where the victim has to bend over to get a good look at it. Once bent over, the victim is at the mercy of the pranksters.
ENGINEERING APPRENTICE
engineering apprenticeship in the United Kingdom is an apprenticeship in mechanical engineering or electrical engineering or aeronautical engineering
the placement. Although the formal boundaries and terminology of the apprentice/journeyman/master system often do not extend outside guilds and trade
2022: Inventors and Innovators 2021: Engineering Heroes 2020: Sustainability 2019: Apprentices and Former Apprentices 2018: Returners and Transferrers 2017:
the first female engineering apprentice at Vickers-Armstrongs (Aircraft), Brooklands. She became President of the Women's Engineering Society and was instrumental
was a British aeronautical engineer and the first female graduate engineering apprentice at Vickers-Armstrongs. Gulland attended Berkhamsted Girls School
Clydebank near Glasgow, where he spent five years employed as an engineering apprentice at Drysdales, a maker of marine pumps. Parsons was 16 when his parents
Portland, after finishing high school he worked for four years as an engineering apprentice and draftsman for Belknap Motor Company and Maine Electric Company
grew up in Sydney, leaving school at the age of 16 and becoming an engineering apprentice. He joined the Australian Army in 1915 and was a motorcycle despatch
Colleges/Universities) Future Engineering Faculty Fellowship Program HBCU/Minority Institutions Program Science and Engineering Apprentice Program (SEAP) (Run by
annual Engineering Services Examination conducted by UPSC. 25% through direct recruitment through the annual Special Class Railway Apprentice Examination
ENGINEERING APPRENTICE
A person that works in the engineering spaces.
Miscellaneous anything. eg. "On the port we have the Deck Department, on the Starboard we have the Engineering Department, and midships we have the Odds and Sods."
An engineering term meaning that the engines are completely shut down.
Any engineering-department man
1. During the 17th century, a naval rating for an experienced seaman. 2. From the 18th century, a naval commissioned officer candidate. 3. From the 1790s, an apprentice naval officer. 4. From the 19th century, an officer cadet at a naval academy. 5. In contemporary RCN usage, the term is sometimes used for a second year Naval Cadet.
A signaling system linking bridge and main engineering control; used to command engine speeds.
n. a pimp in training; a pimp apprentice. "Did you see them pimpershcnaps trying to talk to Sheila and Tasha after school?"Â
A member of the Marine Engineering Branch who attended the St. Lawrence College (or equivalent) Marine Engineering Programme, entering the two-year course as a recruit and exiting as a Master Seaman.
A common name (mainly used by members of the Engineering branch) given as an insult to members of other trades. It was originally a name given to an Ordinary Seaman Stokers who's only job in the Engine Room or Boiler Room was to wipe up oil leaks off the deck.
Canadian Forces Naval Engineering School.
Marine Engineering Mechanic, Technician, or Artificer. The term stoker derives from the days of coal-fired boilers and steam engines.
The engineering crew of the vessel, i.e., crewmembers who work in the vessel's engine room, fire room, and boiler room, so called because they would be covered in coal dust during the days of coal-fired steamships. To be more politically correct the term has now been shifted to "Black-Hand Gang".
Engineering technician.
A report from the Engineering Department that the main propulsion is ready for engine orders.
(sometimes pronounced “Blang-Blangâ€Â) Used to be jewelry such as silver, platinum, or diamonds and sometimes gold. Now the word expands to describe extremely expensive style of clothes, cars and general life-style. "Did you see Donald Trump’s house in The Apprentice- I’ve never seen so much bling bling!" or "Jose’s blinging it!" Lyrical reference: BIRDMAN, LIL' WAYNE LYRICS - Over Here Hustlin' "Bling bling king nigga, money ain't a thing..."Â
The mythical final commemorative rivet which completes a ship, an idea doubtlessly adapted from the "golden spike" that was driven at the completion of the transcontinental railroad. On a naval ship, the normal folklore is that the special rivet is found in the depths of the engineering spaces, usually somewhere where the victim has to bend over to get a good look at it. Once bent over, the victim is at the mercy of the pranksters.