SHIFT LÀ GÌ

lớn (cause something or someone to) move sầu or change from one position or direction to another, especially slightly:
 

Muốn học tập thêm?

Nâng cao vốn từ vựng của khách hàng với English Vocabulary in Use trường đoản cú sumuoi.mobi.

Bạn đang xem: Shift là gì

Học các từ bỏ bạn phải giao tiếp một bí quyết sáng sủa.

Xem thêm: K8Vinablog - Chia sẻ đôi nét về nhà cái K8 số 1 Châu Á


a group of workers who vày a job for a period of time during the day or night, or the period of time itself:
Are you on the night shift or the day shift? (= Do you work during the night period or the day period?)
When you shift the gears of a vehicle, you move them inlớn different positions to lớn change the speed of the vehicle.
the period that a person is scheduled khổng lồ work, or a group of workers who work during the same period of time:
shift (sth) away from sth They have shifted the emphasis of the business away from traditional manufacturing.
The sales projections were over-optimistic and left them with $100 million of stoông xã they couldn"t shift.
an agreed period of time during the day or night when particular employees work, in a factory, hospital, etc.:
on a computer keyboard, a key that changes the letter, number, or symbol that would normally appear when you press another key at the same time:
In that way, those who occupy velớn points may be bought out, thereby allowing policy khổng lồ be shifted onkhổng lồ a new path.
An important part of the development of chemotherapy services has been the shift in administration & support for chemotherapy towards speciadanh mục nursing services.
Including too few elements would result in numerous unnecessary focus shifts whereas including too many elements would preclude real focus shifts.
This has been described as a shift from government khổng lồ governance: from representative sầu lớn participatory democracy.
There was another shift in the 1980s, due khổng lồ the needs of uncertain reasoning in virtually all applications of expert systems, especially in medicine.
*

*

*

*

*