Definition, Betydelse & Synonymer | Engelska ordet TURNAROUND


TURNAROUND

Definition av TURNAROUND

  1. vändning

3

Antal bokstäver

10

Är palindrom

Nej

22
AR
ARO
NA
NAR
ND
OU

1

1

578
AD
ADN
ADO
ADR
ADT


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Exempel på hur man kan använda TURNAROUND i en mening

  • At first there was no turnaround, so the train backed in from Jump River, then unloaded supplies and loaded wood products, then steamed back out.
  • Despite numerous awards from the aviation industry in the 2000s and early 2010s, In 2013, the airline initiated a turnaround plan after large losses beginning in 2011 and cut routes to unprofitable long-haul destinations, such as Los Angeles, Buenos Aires and South Africa.
  • The airport's two largest airlines, SAS and Norwegian, showed little interest in such amenity and desired quicker turnaround times.
  • In 1967, Harvey Lichtenstein was appointed executive director and during his 32 years in that role, BAM experienced a turnaround, attracting audiences with new programming and establishing an endowment.
  • Crane went to Conrail in 1981, where he presided over the turnaround of the deficit-plagued railroad, which began turning a profit as a result of Staggers Act freedoms and its own managerial improvements under his leadership.
  • CEO Dave Pflieger described the airline as a hybrid carrier, part start-up, part turnaround, both independent, and a partner to a larger airline (United).
  • The chairman of the FDGB was Herbert Warnke until his death on March 26, 1975, when he was replaced by Harry Tisch, a member of the SED’s Politburo, who kept the post until the political turnaround in 1989.
  • STS-61-B marked the quickest turnaround of a Shuttle orbiter from launch to launch in history – just 54 days elapsed between Atlantis launch on STS-51-J and launch on STS-61-B.
  • This escalator was originally intended to carry the passengers from the arrival platform of this terminus towards a bus station which has now disappeared, of which the parking lot retains the shape of the turnaround loop for buses extending the service to Créteil.
  • Wooden had immediate success, fashioning the mark of the rarest of coaches, an "instant turnaround" for an undistinguished, faltering program.
  • Technical assignments have included: involvement in the upgrade of the Shuttle Mission Simulator (SMS), development of the Flight Data File (FDF), lead of the astronaut launch support team responsible for crew ingress/strap-in prior to launch and crew egress after landing; monitored the refurbishment of OV-102 and OV-103 during ground turnaround processing; lead spacecraft communicator (CAPCOM), Astronaut Office Lead of Shuttle Operations, and Deputy Director, Flight Crew Operations Directorate.
  • Bouwmeester and the Blues struggled during the first half of the season, ultimately replacing head coach Mike Yeo with Craig Berube, but had a late-season turnaround and ultimately clinched a playoff berth on March 29, 2019.
  • Cul-de-sac, a dead-end street with a circular turnaround area for vehicles to turn around and exit back the way they came in.
  • Fox considered Cybill Shepherd and Joan Rivers for the role, but ultimately never produced the film, and it went into turnaround to Weintraub Entertainment Group, where the title was changed to Two Kids.
  • The company also invests heavily in a prime commercial location with fashion-forward window displays for optimum high street visibility and product turnaround.
  • Due to a tight turnaround schedule on the first LaserJet, HP elected to use the controller already developed by Canon for the CX engine in the first LaserJet.
  • According to Iannone, he was told the company "won't last six months", but he cut expenses and restructured debt, effecting a turnaround by 1983.
  • Some other ufologists thought that Hynek was being disingenuous or even duplicitous in his turnaround.
  • Agents that I know that have been resourced to working e-mail backlog have said that there is a 15 day turnaround time for nothing more than a response back.
  • Hindley's supporters, including penal reformer Lord Longford, journalist David Astor and prison governor Peter Timms, claimed that the increase in Hindley's sentence was the response of a succession of Home Secretaries to public opinion, as there was widespread media and public opposition to Hindley ever being released, and similarly widespread doubt as to whether her reported remorse and rehabilitation were genuine – the fact that she had not admitted the two additional murders until 20 years into her sentence further strengthened the argument of those who felt that her reported turnaround was nothing more than an attempt to boost her chances of parole.


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