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Look up: recruitment

  1. Recruitment
    The amount of fish added to the exploitable stock each year due to growth and/or migration into the fishing area. For example, the number of fish that grow to become vulnerable to the fishing gear in one year would be the recruitment to the fishable population that year. This term is also used in referring to the number of fish from a year class reaching a certain age. For example, all fish reaching their second year would be age 2 recruits.
    Found on http://www.nefsc.noaa.gov/techniques/tec

  2. Recruitment
    The residue of those larvae that have: (1) dispersed; (2) settled at the adult site; (3) made some final movements toward the adult habitat; (4) metamorphosed successfully, and (5) survived to be detected by the observer
    Found on http://life.bio.sunysb.edu/marinebio/glo

  3. Recruitment
    The addition of new individuals to a population, usually either by birth or immigration.
    Found on http://www.pestmanagement.co.uk/lib/glos

  4. recruitment
    [n] - the act of getting recruits
    Found on http://www.webdictionary.co.uk/definitio

  5. Recruitment
    The number of new juvenile fish reaching a size where they come large enough to catch via commercial fishing methods
    Found on http://www.cefas.co.uk/glossary.aspx

  6. Recruitment
    the process by which juvenile fish enter the exploitable stock and become susceptible to fishing.
    Found on http://www.fishonline.org/information/gl

  7. Recruitment
    When the trial is open for people to enter.
    Found on http://www.cancerhelp.org.uk/glossary.as

  8. Recruitment
    The process of finding the right person for the job. This can include interviews, application forms, assessment centres and pyschometric tests etc.
    Found on http://www.grb.uk.com/448.0.html?&tx_ttn

  9. recruitment
    an aspect of certain forms of perceptive deafness,whereby the growth of loudness of a sound with its sound pressure level is greater than it is for normal subjects Category: Medicine • the addition to a population from all causes,i.e.reproduction,immigration,and stocking Category: agriculture, fisheries, forestry - food processing industries • the process by which fish ente...
    Found on http://www.mijnwoordenboek.nl/definition

  10. Recruitment
    Additions to a population, either through birth or immigration, or, in the case of net recruitment, the differences between such additions and the losses resulting from death or emigration.
    Found on http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/Towns

  11. Recruitment
    Re·cruit'ment (-m e nt) noun The act or process of recruiting; especially, the enlistment of men for an army.
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/R/27

  12. recruitment
    <neurology> The gradual increase to a maximum in a reflex when a stimulus of unaltered intensity is prolonged. ... (12 Dec 1998) ...
    Found on http://www.mondofacto.com/facts/dictiona

  13. recruitment
    enlisting noun the act of getting recruits; enlisting people for the army (or for a job or a cause etc.)
    Found on http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?

  14. Recruitment
    `Recruitment` refers to the process of sourcing, screening, and selecting people for a job or vacancy within an organization. Though individuals can undertake individual components of the recruitment process, mid- and large-size organizations generally retain professional recruiters.
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recruitment

  15. recruitment
    (re-krldbomact´mәnt) the gradual increase to a maximum in a reflex when a stimulus of unaltered intensity is prolonged. in audiology, an abnormal increase in loudness caused by a very slight increase in sound intensity, as in Meniere disease. follicle recruitment the p...
    Found on http://www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns

  16. Recruitment
    • (n.) The act or process of recruiting; especially, the enlistment of men for an army.
    Found on http://thinkexist.com/dictionary/meaning

  17. recruitment
    (from the article `ear, human`) ...not be heard at all by the ear with a sensorineural impairment, more intense sounds may be as loud as they are to a healthy ear. This rapid ...
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/r/20

  18. recruitment
    (from the article `guerrilla warfare`) Such are the vicissitudes of guerrilla warfare that outstanding leadership is necessary at all levels if a guerrilla force is to survive and prosper. ...
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/r/20

  19. Recruitment
    the addition of new individuals to a population by reproduction (Ricklefs 1970:878), commonly measured as the proportion of young in the population just before the breeding season (Ricklefs 1970:418).
    Found on http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/liter

  20. recruitment
    in certain cases of hearing impairment, for example of cochlear origin, an increase of loudness with increasing stimulus magnitude at a rate greater than for a normal ear
    Found on http://www.electropedia.org/iev/iev.nsf/


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25 November 2009

This day in history:
The Royal Suspension Chain Pier was opened on 25 November 1823 with a procession and firework display, but, to the disappointment of the town, without royalty being present. It proved an immediate success with both cross-channel travellers and also with promenaders who were charged an admission of two pence or one guinea annually. The pier also attracted many artists with its graceful outline, including Constable and Turner. read more

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