Internships can be categorized as a noun.
Noun |
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internship - the position of a medical intern |
# | Sentence | ||
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1. | noun | Internships can be traced to apprenticeships of the Middle Ages, where craftsmen trained unskilled labor in a trade. | |
2. | noun | In 2014, 46.5% of internships were unpaid. | |
3. | noun | Top cities by population — New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington — offer the most internships. According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, these cities are among the most expensive in the country. | |
4. | noun | Erin Johansson, research director of Jobs With Justice, a nonprofit organization that advocates for workers' rights, said she believes unpaid internships limit employment equality. | |
5. | noun | Students in quarantine are keeping up with their assignments online and continuing their internships remotely. | |
6. | noun | I'm going to do an internship at a local company. | |
7. | noun | In regard to the internship system in the United States I availed myself of part of Miyumi Tanaka's work "Making doctors in Harvard" (Igaku-Shoin Ltd.) as a reference. | |
8. | noun | In 2000 Japan's health care system was the best in the world, but since clinical internship was introduced in 2003 it has clearly deteriorated. | |
9. | noun | I applied for a summer internship. | |
10. | noun | I am not qualified for this internship. | |
11. | noun | I am writing my internship report. | |
12. | noun | I'm not qualified for this internship. | |
13. | noun | Currently, at least 60% of college graduates have completed an internship, according to the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE). | |
14. | noun | An internship is the most important credential for entering the job market. | |
15. | noun | "Recent studies have indicated that students graduating with internship experiences, in general, are more likely than students without those experiences to find employment upon graduation," wrote the NACE Journal in May 2017. |
Sentence | |
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noun | |
Internships can be traced to apprenticeships of the Middle Ages, where craftsmen trained unskilled labor in a trade. | |
In 2014, 46.5% of internships were unpaid. | |
Top cities by population — New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington — offer the most internships. According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, these cities are among the most expensive in the country. | |
Erin Johansson, research director of Jobs With Justice, a nonprofit organization that advocates for workers' rights, said she believes unpaid internships limit employment equality. | |
Students in quarantine are keeping up with their assignments online and continuing their internships remotely. | |
I'm going to do an internship at a local company. | |
In regard to the internship system in the United States I availed myself of part of Miyumi Tanaka's work "Making doctors in Harvard" (Igaku-Shoin Ltd.) as a reference. | |
In 2000 Japan's health care system was the best in the world, but since clinical internship was introduced in 2003 it has clearly deteriorated. | |
I applied for a summer internship. | |
I am not qualified for this internship. | |
I am writing my internship report. | |
I'm not qualified for this internship. | |
Currently, at least 60% of college graduates have completed an internship, according to the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE). | |
An internship is the most important credential for entering the job market. | |
"Recent studies have indicated that students graduating with internship experiences, in general, are more likely than students without those experiences to find employment upon graduation," wrote the NACE Journal in May 2017. |