2022-03-11
ศัพท์ น่าสับสน - Set – E – experience & experiment
แนะนำการใช้ ตามที่ส่วนใหญ่ใช้ แต่ละท้องถิ่น
ความหมาย อาจผันแปร ตาม ตำแหน่ง/หน้าที่ ในประโยค
Dictionary.com:
ออกเสียง experience = “ik-SPEER-ee-uhn”
ออกเสียง experiment – noun = “ik-SPER-uh-muhnt”
– verb = “ik-SPER-uh-ment”
The A-Z of Correct English Common Errors in English Dictionary:
experience
(not expierience, not -ance)
The second syllable is derived from the Latin word per,
meaning through.
(Experience is what we gain from going ‘through’ something.)
Dictionary.com:
WHEN TO USE
What is another way to say experience?
To experience something is to meet with it or feel it firsthand.
How is experience different from undergo?
Highlight relevant experience
Ideally, a strong resume is tailored to the specific job
you are applying for.
Read the job posting closely and do some research
into the company and position.
Mirror the expectations and language of the job posting
in your own resume to demonstrate you’re a good fit for the post.
Here’s how you can do this.
Education & experience
First, the basics.
Most job postings list preferred credentials and number of years of job experience.
When writing your resume, you will want to include your credentials
in the education section (more on that in second)
in a way that makes it clear you match their needs.
If the job listing is looking for someone with, say, three years of experience,
when describing or accounting your work experience
be sure to note the length of time.
You might even choose to mention it in the resume summary,
as in “Tutor with three years experience.”
Relevant experience is key
Next, the big picture.
If you have worked a variety of jobs, or worked multiple jobs at one time, you may not want to list every single experience you’ve ever had on your resume.
Instead, you should pick the activities
that are the closest match to the job posting.
Let’s say, for example, that you are applying for a job in retail.
Over the years, you have worked a variety of retail jobs in addition to driving delivery. It would be more important to write in detail about all of your jobs in retail rather than try to squeeze in all your part-time delivery driving.
Of course, if you don’t have a lot of work experience
or are worried about employment gaps,
you can fill out your work experience with less-relevant jobs.
However, you should still focus on the work that is most relevant to the position.
Order & structure of experience
Now, let’s look at the structure and language.
You will want to list your work experiences in order from most to least recent.
Farlex Trivia Dictionary:
Experience, experiment, expert - Experience, experiment and expert derive from Latin experiri, "try."
See also related terms for try.
Merriam-Webster Dictionary:
History and Etymology for experiment
Noun
Middle English, "testing, proof, remedy,"
borrowed from Anglo-French esperiment,
borrowed from Latin experīmentum "testing, experience, proof," from experīrī "to put to the test, attempt,
have experience of, undergo" + -mentum -MENT
— more at EXPERIENCE entry 1
Merriam-Webster Dictionary:
History and Etymology for experience
Noun
Middle English, borrowed from Anglo-French,
borrowed from Latin experientia "testing of possibilities,
participation in events, skill gained by practice,
" noun derivative of experient-, experiens, present participle of experīrī "
to put to the test, attempt, have experience of, undergo,"
from ex- EX- entry 1 + -perīrī, from a presumed verbal base *per- "
test, risk," perhaps going back to Indo-European *pr̥h3-i
Similes Dictionary:, 1st Edition
Experience
See Also: KNOWLEDGE
- Experience is … a kind of huge spider-web of the finest silken
threads suspended in the chamber of consciousness,
and catching every air-borne particle in its tissue —Henry James
2. Experience is like medicine;
some persons require larger doses of it than others,
and do not like to take it pure, but a little disguised
and better adapted to taste —Lord Acton
3. Experience, like a pale musician, holds a dulcimer of patience
in his hand —Elizabeth Barrett Browning
4. Experience seems to be like the shining of a bright lantern.
It suddenly makes clear in the mind what was already there,
perhaps, but dim —Walter De La Mare
5. A new element in her experience; like a chapter in a book —Henry Van Dyke
6. The solitary and unshared experience dies of itself
like the violations of love —Archibald MacLeish
7. To most men, experience is like the stern light of a ship,
which illumines only the track it has passed —Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Collins COBUID English Dictionary:
experience - experiment
1. 'experience'
If you have experience of something,
you have seen it, done it, or felt it.
Do you have any teaching experience?
I've had no experience of running a business.
An experience is something that happens to you
or something that you do.
Moving house can be a stressful experience.
You say that someone has an experience.
I had a strange experience last night.
Be Careful!
Don't say that someone 'makes an experience'.
2. 'experiment'
Don't use 'experience' to refer to a scientific test
that is carried out in order to discover or prove something.
Use experiment.
Laboratory experiments show that Vitamin D may slow cancer growth.
Try it out in an experiment.
You usually say that someone does, conducts,
or carries out an experiment.
We decided to do an experiment.
Several experiments were conducted at the University of Zurich.
Be Careful!
Don't say that someone 'makes an experiment'.