Why don’t you believe me? Do you want me to send the certificates?
Discuss electrician vs gas engineering in the USA area at PlumbersForums.net
Why don’t you believe me? Do you want me to send the certificates?
I just speak like that, what’s wrong with abbreviation? How else do you want me to tell you I performed well?bio chem and psychology (no one abbreviates their A Levels like this) "I did good on them" LOL."which is less dying" I'm calling this one as BS.
We all speak like that. It isn't generally accepted as good practice, however, to abbreviate words in written English. Acronyms (e.g. BBC, HMRC, NI) are acceptable, but shorthand such as rads, hex, bio and chem are not. There is, of course, a grey area and most people would accept 'bus', 'bra', 'pram', and 'maths' as if they were not abbreviations at all, and, in all but formal contexts, it is now common to see abbreviations such as 'weren't' and 'can't'.I just speak like that, what’s wrong with abbreviation? How else do you want me to tell you I performed well?
Don't worry about all the negativity on here aurora some of us have less patience than others, you will find as you go through your life you really do need to communicate well customers, employers, others you work with need you to fully understand them, and also be understood yourself it's vitality important as health and safety plays a big part in the building trade, mistakes are made and quite often they could of been avoided if people communicated better.I just speak like that, what’s wrong with abbreviation? How else do you want me to tell you I performed well?
According to the IChemE 2018 salary survey the median new graduate salary was £28.4k. The median salary for chartered chemical engineers in the 30-34 yr age band, i.e. '10 years in' was £56k.Chemical engineering graduates starting out could expect £35k. 10 years in, £150k min. Plumber tops @ £35k career best
I was thinking the sameAccording to the IChemE 2018 salary survey the median new graduate salary was £28.4k. The median salary for chartered chemical engineers in the 30-34 yr age band, i.e. '10 years in' was £56k.
I don't know where your figure for '£35k career best' comes from but it's a long way short of what's possible:
He's flush! The plumber who earns £210,000 and doesn't work weekends
Plumber Stephen Fry is proof of just how lucrative the trade can be – as any homeowner who has faced a bill for an emergency call-out may well suspect. At 34, he earns £210,000 a year.www.dailymail.co.uk
Yeah, but don't mistake what's possible in terms of salary with what's likely. £35k is probably not far from the median salary for a plumber employed by a company in a part of the country where the cost of living is 'average'. That's why so many take the self-employed path.I was thinking the same
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