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 recruit [rɪ'krut]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 新兵, 新手, 新会员, 补给品

vt. 恢复, 补充, 充实, 征募

vi. 征募新兵, 复原, 得到补充

[经] 补充(给养), 征募




    recruit
    [ noun ]
    1. a recently enlisted soldier

    2. <noun.person>
    3. any new member or supporter (as in the armed forces)

    4. <noun.person>
    [ verb ]
    1. register formally as a participant or member

    2. <verb.social> enrol enroll enter inscribe
      The party recruited many new members
    3. seek to employ

    4. <verb.possession>
      The lab director recruited an able crew of assistants
    5. cause to assemble or enlist in the military

    6. <verb.competition>
      levy raise
      raise an army
      recruit new soldiers


    Recruit \Re*cruit"\, v. i.
    1. To gain new supplies of anything wasted; to gain health,
    flesh, spirits, or the like; to recuperate; as, lean
    cattle recruit in fresh pastures.

    2. To gain new supplies of men for military or other service;
    to raise or enlist new soldiers; to enlist troops.


    Recruit \Re*cruit"\, n.
    1. A supply of anything wasted or exhausted; a
    re["e]nforcement.

    The state is to have recruits to its strength, and
    remedies to its distempers. --Burke.

    2. Specifically, a man enlisted for service in the army; a
    newly enlisted soldier.


    Recruit \Re*cruit"\ (r?*kr?t"), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Recruited};
    p. pr. & vb. n. {Recruiting}.] [F. recruter, corrupted (under
    influence of recrue recruiting, recruit, from recro[^i]/tre,
    p. p. recr[^u], to grow again) from an older recluter,
    properly, to patch, to mend (a garment); pref. re- + OF. clut
    piece, piece of cloth; cf. Icel. kl[=u]tr kerchief, E.
    clout.]
    1. To repair by fresh supplies, as anything wasted; to remedy
    lack or deficiency in; as, food recruits the flesh; fresh
    air and exercise recruit the spirits.

    Her cheeks glow the brighter, recruiting their
    color. --Glanvill.

    2. Hence, to restore the wasted vigor of; to renew in
    strength or health; to reinvigorate.

    3. To supply with new men, as an army; to fill up or make up
    by enlistment; as, he recruited two regiments; the army
    was recruited for a campaign; also, to muster; to enlist;
    as, he recruited fifty men. --M. Arnold.

    1. A police recruit who collapsed from heat stroke and dehydration Sept. 19 on the first day of boot camp-like training at an academy in Agawam has died, officials said today.
    2. Noting that Britain's fragmented printing industry tends to be rather short of top management, Gavron says that the company has often tended to recruit outsiders.
    3. And he agreed to increased funding to recruit of minority students and teachers, but rejected a demand for student involvement in hiring faculty.
    4. The cruise, part of the Navy's campaign to recruit sailors, will send the Antrim to 21 ports over three months.
    5. "We're trying to recruit the best people we can for the program," said John Otto, executive assistant FBI director. "There are no quotas at this time.
    6. Arthur Zimiga, who works with a United Methodist Church program in Rapid City to help Indian youth learn job and social skills they need in today's world, helped recruit the Indian participants.
    7. Hope Muir has the qualities of bright assurance her role needs; Picone, a young Italian recruit to the company, promises marvels.
    8. The public-sector division of Service Employees International Union sought to reduce nurse-patient ratios and improve measures to retain and recruit nurses.
    9. Matthew Broderick stars in the film as a young Army recruit who is introduced to the pleasures of the flesh by Rowena.
    10. We have been in contact with other oil producers and will continue to try to recruit them."
    11. Government lawyers said the tests are particularly important now because the Customs Service plans to recruit some 3,000 new employees, including many in the 18-25 age range in which use of illegal drugs is most prevalent.
    12. Now, he works for Narcotic and Drug Research Inc., which runs ARRIVE, going to prisons to recruit prospective students.
    13. With all the Hollywood hype to recruit stars for "Gone With the Wind," Mitchell, who wrote the Pulitzer Prize-winning best seller, kept her distance because she feared fellow Southerners would blame her if the movie didn't turn out well.
    14. The FBI said its attempt to recruit librarians was part of a national counterintelligence initiative.
    15. The hospital administrator said he already is working to recruit another physician.
    16. If you can get to work and you can apply for a job, you ought to be hired on your merit." Honda last fall expanded its hiring area to 17 counties and agreed to recruit and advertise in Columbus and implement new training programs.
    17. Hassan Minor, a director of the Partnership, a Boston group formed to recruit and retain minority professionals, says, "The most marketable thing in the world today is very talented people of color."
    18. At Raymond James, for instance, about 105 new brokers joined the firm last yearhalf of those came from other firms. Mr. James said Raymond James couldn't expect to recruit such a crop in 1992.
    19. The mass expulsions are the first since 1978 when 13 Soviet diplomats were sent home for trying to recruit a Royal Canadian Mounted Police intelligence officer as a double agent.
    20. One person killed himself and six others attempted suicide during the summer at the same recruit training center in Colombier in the West of Switzerland.
    21. One recruit lost 44 pounds; all soon were coping with forced marches and 100 push-ups a day.
    22. She said the government has programs to recruit Hispanics.
    23. He was an unusual recruit for Digital, which hasn't hired anyone else from outside the company to such a high ranking position.
    24. Recruitment agencies will typically charge 25 per cent of the salary involved while headhunters will charge 33 per cent. With unemployment at very high levels in the accountancy sector, now is a good time to recruit a finance director.
    25. Another recent addition is prominent New York businessman John Dyson, who promised to recruit 400 to 500 business officials in his state.
    26. Hall said the higher operating loss resulted from increased spending to recruit new technical personnel, and increased costs for automations systems, part of Hall's strategic plan.
    27. But the Bank will recruit more analysts, junior managers and graduates. The reorganisation has caused considerable distress at the Bank.
    28. Alma Catalina, a recruit correctional officer at the San Diego County Sheriff's Academy, was scheduled to graduate this spring.
    29. Health care profession schools should be given incentives to recruit medical students into specialties that are underrepresented but needed due to the HIV epidemic.
    30. The document will outline ways in which the government can recruit more people with strong private-sector experience into the upper echelons of Whitehall.
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