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If there are multiple founders, each can be referred to as a co - founder. | job |
If the organization is a business, the founder is usually an entrepreneur. | job |
If an organization is created to carry out charitable work, the founder is generally considered a philanthropist. | job |
A counter - revolutionary or anti - revolutionary is anyone who opposes a revolution, particularly those who act after a revolution to try to overturn or reverse it, in full or in part. | job |
An iron founder also iron - founder or ironfounder is a worker in molten ferrous metal, generally working within an iron foundry. | job |
Game design is the art of applying design and aesthetics to create a game for entertainment or for educational, exercise, or experimental purposes. | job |
Increasingly, elements and principles of game design are also applied to other interactions, in the form of gamification. | job |
Sawyer is an occupational term referring to someone who saws wood, particularly using a pit saw either in a saw pit or with the log on trestles above ground or operates a sawmill. | job |
The term sawyer is still widely used in the logging industry to refer to the operator of a chainsaw (or still in some limited applications, a crosscut saw) for harvesting, wildfire suppression, trail construction and related work. | job |
In the construction industry, the term sawyer is applied to the operator of a concrete saw. | job |
A stylite or pillar - saint is a type of person who lives on pillars, preaching, fasting and praying. | job |
Stylites believe that the mortification of their bodies would help ensure the salvation of their souls. | job |
Stylites were common in the early days of the Byzantine Empire. | job |
The first known stylite was Simeon Stylites the Elder who climbed a pillar in Syria in 423 and remained there until his death 37 years later. | job |
A discussion moderator or debate moderator is a person whose role is to act as a neutral participant in a debate or discussion, holds participants to time limits and tries to keep them from straying off the topic of the questions being raised in the debate. | job |
Sometimes moderators may ask questions intended to allow the debate participants to fully develop their argument in order to ensure the debate moves at pace. | job |
In panel discussions commonly held at academic conferences the moderator usually introduces the participants and solicits questions from the audience. | job |
On television and radio shows, a moderator will often take calls from people having differing views, and will use those calls as a starting point to ask questions of guests on the show. | job |
Perhaps the most prominent role of moderators is in political debates, which have become a common feature of election campaigns. | job |
The moderator may have complete control over which questions to ask, or may act as a filter by selecting questions from the audience. | job |
A revolutionary is a person who either participates in or advocates revolution. | job |
A revolutionary is a person who either participates in or advocates revolution. | job |
A stock model is a person being photographed for one or more pictures in different poses, clothing, places, with or without props. | job |
A stock model is photographed for various advertisements, and media projects including photo manipulations. | job |
For a business or project, stock model photos are cheaper and more practical to use than hiring a model and a photographer. | job |
A chief digital officer ie CDO or a chief digital information officer ie CDIO is an individual who helps a company, a government organization or a city drive growth by converting analog businesses to digital ones using the potential of modern online technologies and data ie digital transformation. | job |
A chief digital officer at times oversees operations in the rapidly changing digital sectors like mobile applications, social media and related applications, virtual goods, as well as web based information management and marketing. | job |
Hunting master of the court is an honorary court title awarded to a limited number of major and usually noble land owners by the Danish monarch. | job |
As of the 01.03.2019, 52 persons hold the Hunting master of the court title in Denmark whereof 42 are men and 10 are women. | job |
A vedette is the main female artist of a show derived from cabaret and its genres (revue, vaudeville, music hall or burlesque). | job |
The purpose of the vedette in a cabaret or nightclub show is to entertain the public. | job |
The vedette has to know how to sing, dance and act on stage. | job |
Depending on the quality of its show, career or mastery of one or more stage talents, can be considered a super vedette or first vedette. | job |
Generally a vedette is a woman with physical presence, personality and charisma that captivates the public. | job |
In addition to singing, dancing and acting, vedettes often included groups of dancers, flashy and revealing costumes, magicians, comedians, jugglers, and even performing animals. | job |
Vedettes specializing in burlesque generally do striptease and may also perform nude on stage. | job |
In the 20th century, vedette shows were successful in the cabarets, theaters and nightclubs of countries such as Spain, France, Argentina and Mexico. | job |
Paris and Las Vegas were considered the main cradle of the vedettes. | job |
A research participant also called a human subject or an experiment, trial, or study participant or subject, is a person who participates in human subject research by being the target of observation by researchers. | job |
A lay theologian is a theologian who has not received formal theological training. | job |
Many who are regarded as lay theologians have advanced degrees in other academic disciplines. | job |
A prison visitor is a person who visits prisons to befriend and monitor the welfare of prisoners in general, as distinct from a person who visits a specific prisoner to whom they have a prior connection. | job |
A sporting director or director of sport is an executive management position in a body concerned with sport. | job |
The sporting director role is best known as a manager role at continental European football clubs, which are usually sports clubs offering many types of sports. | job |
While the coach takes care of the team in daily work, the manager or sporting director takes care of hiring the team. | job |
The sporting director is, in many cases, a member of the and therefore an executive director. | job |
In English football clubs both roles, director of sports and coach, are united into one person, the manager. | job |
In addition to a sporting director or manager, big clubs in rare cases also appoint a director of football, like Paris Saint Germain or Everton. | job |
The director of football is usually not a member of the board. | job |
A kadi was an official in the Ottoman Empire. | job |
The term kadi refers to judges who preside over matters in accordance with Islamic law, but in the Ottoman Empire, the kadi also became a crucial part of the central authority administrative hierarchy. | job |
After Mehmed II codified his kanun, kadis relied on this dynastic secular law, local customs, and the sharia law to guide their rulings. | job |
Along with adjudicating over criminal and civil matters, the kadis oversaw the administration of religious endowments and was the legal guardian of orphans and others without a guardian. | job |
Although Muslims, in particular Muslim men, possessed a higher status in the court of the kadi, non Muslims and foreigners also had access to the judicial system. | job |
Within the provincial administrative system of Ottoman, known as the timar system, the kadi served as an important check on the power of the military class. | job |
Despite the unquestioned authority of the sultan, kadis possessed a certain degree of autonomy in their rulings. | job |
A kadis territory was called a kadiluk; there could be several kadiluks in a province (sanjak). | job |
A maiko is an apprentice geisha in Kyoto and Western Japan. | job |
The maiko job consists of performing songs, dances, and playing the shamisen or other traditional Japanese instruments for visitors during ozashiki. | job |
Maiko are usually aged 15 to 20 years old and become geiko after learning how to dance the traditional dances, play the shamisen, and learning Kyō - kotoba (dialect of Kyoto), regardless of their origins. | job |
Unlicensed assistive personnel or UAP are paraprofessionals who assist individuals with physical disabilities, mental impairments, and other health care needs with their activities of daily living (ADLs). | job |
UAPs also provide bedside care — including basic nursing procedures — all under the supervision of a registered nurse, licensed practical nurse or other health care professional. | job |
UAPs must demonstrate their ability and competence before gaining any expanded responsibilities in a clinical setting. | job |
While providing this care, UAPs offer compassion and patience and are part of the patient healthcare support system. | job |
Communication between UAPs and registered nurses or RNs is key as they are working together in their patients best interests. | job |
The scope of care UAPs are responsible for is delegated by RNs or other clinical licensed professionals. | job |
UAPs care for patients in hospitals, residents of nursing facilities, clients in private homes, and others in need of their services due to old age or disability. | job |
By definition UAPs do not hold a license or other mandatory professional requirements for practice, though many hold various certifications. | job |
UAPs are collectively categorized under the group personal care workers in health services in the International Standard Classification of Occupations, 2008 revision. | job |
Aikidoka is a Japanese term for a practitioner of the martial art Aikido. | job |
R&D management is the discipline of designing and leading R&D processes, managing R&D organizations, and ensuring smooth transfer of new know how and technology to other groups or departments involved in innovation. | job |
A copyright troll is a party (person or company) that enforces copyrights it owns for purposes of making money through litigation, in a manner considered unduly aggressive or opportunistic, generally without producing or licensing the works it owns for paid distribution. | job |
Müneccimbasi was the title given to the chief court astrologer in the Ottoman Empire. | job |
Bravi were a species of coarse soldiery or hired assassins employed by the rural lordlings of northern Italy in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries to protect their interests. | job |
A mob enforcer is a member or associate of an organized crime or corrupt political organization that is responsible for handling those who do not go along with organization policies, rules and deals. | job |
Mob enforcers were commonly used for collecting protection money for the mob from shopkeepers and small businesses. | job |
Also, Mob enforcers were used in mob wars for seizing enemy turf. | job |
In the Sicilian Mafia, enforcer is the first rank given to someone who wants to join up. | job |
A drug lord, drug baron, kingpin or narcotrafficker is a high ranking crime boss who controls a sizable network of people involved in the illegal drug trade. | job |
The prosecution of drug lords is therefore usually the result of carefully planned infiltration into their networks, often using informants from within the organization. | job |
A gardener is someone who practices gardening, either professionally or as a hobby. | job |
A bell ringer is a person who rings a bell, usually a church bell, by means of a rope or other mechanism. | job |
Despite some automation of bells for random swinging, there are still many active bell ringers in the world, particularly those with an advanced ringing tradition such as full circle or Russian ringing, which are artistic and skilled performances which are difficult to automate. | job |
The term campanologist is popularly misused to refer to a bell ringer but this properly refers to someone who studies bells, which is known as campanology. | job |
Spotters became commonplace in NASCAR and CART in the late 1980s and early 1990s. | job |
Two way communication between the driver and pit crew began in the 1970s and early 1980s, however, all communication was based in the pit area. | job |
Before the teams possessed weather radar in the pits, the spotters could relay information about approaching rain, for strategic purposes. | job |
By the early to mid 1990s, NASCAR began to standardize the organization of the spotters and eventually made them mandatory. | job |
At each track, a special area was reserved for the spotters one with the best view of the circuit. | job |
At certain tracks, such as Daytona, Talladega, and Indianapolis, multiple spotters are utilized, since it is not possible to see all the way around from one vantage point. | job |
Spotter duties increased as the years went by, and now include assisting drivers (particularly in pack racing) in making passes and racing in heavy traffic. | job |
The spotter primary role is to become the mirrors for the drivers, to notify drivers of possible passing maneuvers from the blind spots and to avoid crashes. | job |
Spotters also are known to work amongst each other, for mutually beneficial situations, even if they are competitors. | job |
For instance, spotters for two cars running together might consummate a deal for their respective drivers to pit together, that way they could re enter the track together, as drafting partners. | job |
Spotters on competing teams might also arrange for their respective drivers to gang up on another car, so that they work together to improve their positions. | job |
Altercations on the track can also lead to heated exchanges among the respective spotters. | job |
Spotters are former drivers, owners, instructors or various crew members who do not otherwise have in race duties. | job |
The music editor is a type of sound editor in film or other multimedia productions (eg video or games) responsible for compiling, editing, and syncing music during the production of a soundtrack. | job |
Among music editor roles is creating a temp track ie a mock up of the film soundtrack using pre existing elements to use for editing, audience previews and other purposes while the film commissioned score is being composed. | job |
A point of contact or POC or single point of contact or SPOC is a person or a department serving as the coordinator or focal point of information concerning an activity or program. | job |
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