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The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... Experienced advertisers know that the manager overseeing accounts should be a careful hire. Much like selecting a financial advisor or primary care physician, there is a lot at stake in choosing an unskilled “professional.” Most business owners do not realize the waste occurring within their ad accounts; they only see the budget spent and the ad results coming in. ... "
" ... Shetty: Amy Wrzesniewski at Yale did this awesome study that I love talking about, seeing as you brought up work. She asked hospital cleaners and staff about their work. They had two groups. The first group explained that their work was low-skilled. It was dirty and it was useless, like the found it to be just ordinary work. The second group in hospitals said that it was the most beautiful work. It was the most fulfilling work and it was highly skilled. So she started digging deeper. When she started digging deeper with these people, she found that the first group that found it to be useless work or unskilled work were just describing what the job description said. So like cleaning, and washing, and drying, and whatever. That's what they were using. The second group, she developed a term called "job crafting". These people didn't see themselves as cleaners. They described themselves as healers, as advocates, as supporters of the people that were sick. So they didn't just clean their sheets, they actually spoke to the patient. They felt that they were involved emotionally in their lives and connected with them. So they had added meaning to their work where their work felt highly skilled and a beautiful expression of healing. ... "
" ... To be sure, the KNMG, or Royal Dutch Medical Association, has not called for an outright ban on the procedure; they are far too politically clever for that. Claiming that such a ban would only put the practice into the hands of the unskilled, they have rather recommended a “change in mentality” among those groups which practice circumcision in the Netherlands – namely Jews and Muslims, those same minority groups which happen also to be affected by the ban on ritual slaughter. Because what this is really about is not health at all, but culture. As radical Muslim groups increasingly put pressure on Holland’s politicians to change policies in order to accommodate their religious preferences – from censoring art exhibitions to (speaking of medicine) requiring that female Muslims be treated only by female physicians (an effort that thankfully failed) -- indigenous Dutch are responding with a stronger nationalism and a tightened grasp on their Christian roots – even to the point of mangling the truth. ... "
" ... You know, I just hate it when folks downplay the need for living wages by referring to working people as unskilled. What does that even mean? I assume anyone who uses that term has never run a pallet jack over their toe or nicked their thumb on a box-knife during an overnight shift, let alone rang up dozens of customers with a perfectly accurate till at shift’s end. ... "
" ... [A note on terms in the foregoing: The GEM uses World Economic Forum (WEF) classifications: (1) factor-driven (subsistence agriculture and extraction businesses dominance, high unskilled labor (2) efficiency-driven (more efficient production processes and better product quality; (3) innovation (knowledge-intensive, expanded service sector) (p. 13).] ... "