Resumes shouldn't contain so
much technical language that a lay reader gets lost.
Keep in mind that recruiters might not be familiar with tech jargon, so only use as
much technical language as you need.
One of the criticisms leveled at traditional churches by the «emergent / emerging» crowd is that they use too
much technical language, theological terms, and Christian jargon that nobody understands.
Not exact matches
As a result,
much of the
language around management and leadership has — or aspires to — a
technical, scientific tone.
Its
language is constructed from key verbal phrases, furnishings, rituals of conflict and conciliation, displays of
technical competence, ways of showing care and worth, and
much more.
«Only in Self - Relative Act can there be Self - Reflexive Terms which are Necessary and Subsistent Relativities, which are best named as «Persons» in human
language, and which again are
much better reflected than in the
language of
technical theology by the titles of «the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.»
In the less
technical language of
much theology, the realms of fact and value were distinguished and the Newtonian - Darwinian world was limited to the former.
Because
much technical and scientific writing is «pretty formulaic and stylized,» Montgomery says, non-natives (like Einstein) can often learn enough of a foreign
language to do a perfectly acceptable job.
Gertrud renounces external eventfulness in order to cultivate internal or imaginative eventfulness» — and using the (constant - and - never - moving as a way to allow viewers to focus on acting and the body rather than on
technical formalist tricks, in fact, the shots are the longest technically allowable before the invention of digital shooting) camera merely as a functional recording - device rather than as an originator of instant meaning and knowledge as in Hollywood, this film remains the best summation of the truism that a longwinded presentation of several actors merely speaking for ten - minutes - a-scene while the camera does not move and no artificial and manipulative «cinematic
language» is involved, in other words, the dreaded «merely filmed non-cinematic literature and theatre,» not only has a
much greater capacity to teach than any Hollywood mode of filmmaking but is more dramatic than any car chase.
But what they get is a domain that is driven very
much by
technical people; people who talk in
technical language and
technical acronyms and actually tend to be a little bit blinded by what technology actually is.
Instead of going through
much technical details (which other websites / blogs do), the focus is on simple understandable
language, that's where this blog earns brownie points... kudos to Vipin for such nice article and all the good stuff he is doing!
Without resorting to too
much dry,
technical language about alleles, or to unhelpful, sweeping generalizations, we'll try to explain what makes a white cat's coat white, and what distinguishes these cats from the extremely rare albinos.
I see
much use of the word «tempo» which I find vague, could you clarify that in more precise,
technical language?
Further, they tend to be laced with so
much legal patentese
language that many
technical people are unfamiliar with they literally do not know how to answer some of the questions.
While you will certainly have to use
technical language in your resume (for example, in your list of
technical skills), avoid using too
much jargon, especially acronyms and terms that not everyone will be familiar with.
To play it safe, it's best not to include too
much technological jargon in your resume and keep the
language simple, so that any non
technical HR manager or recruiter can comprehend it.