No matter what method of job hunting you use, inevitably somebody will ask you for a resume. Most companies require a resume before seriously considering a job candidate from the outside. Resumes are sometimes also required in order to receive a job transfer within a company.The purpose of a resume is to help you obtain a job interview, not a job. Very few people are hired without a personal interview.Effective resumes are straightforward, factual presentations of a person's experience and accomplishments. They are neither over detailed nor too sketchy. A general rule is that two or three pages in length is best.One page seems too superficial; a four-page (or longer) resume may irritate an impatient employment official. Some writers suggest that a chronological (the standard-type) resume be used; others argue for an accomplishment resume.
1. Write the sentences in negative and interrogative. 1) I shan't have written a test by the end of the lesson. 2) When you come back, the children won't have been asleep. 3) I hadn't phoned you before I went to the theatre. 4) Peter hasn't done his morning exercises yet. 5) Mary hasn't dusted the mirror.
1) Will you have written a test by the end of the lesson? 2) Will the children have been asleep when you come back? 3) Had you phoned me before I went to the theatre? 4) Has Peter already done his morning exercises? 5) Has Mary dusted the mirror?
2. Use the correct tense for the verbs in brackets. 1) By the beginning of the next year he will have received a diploma. 2) Have you done your homework already? 3) Tom bought a new watch yesterday as he had lost his old one. 4) My brother called me yesterday. I haven't heard from him for a long time. 5) He has been here for 5 minutes. 6) She could not tell the same after she had travelled West. 7) I regret I have said it.
2) When you come back, the children won't have been asleep.
3) I hadn't phoned you before I went to the theatre.
4) Peter hasn't done his morning exercises yet.
5) Mary hasn't dusted the mirror.
1) Will you have written a test by the end of the lesson?
2) Will the children have been asleep when you come back?
3) Had you phoned me before I went to the theatre?
4) Has Peter already done his morning exercises?
5) Has Mary dusted the mirror?
2. Use the correct tense for the verbs in brackets.
1) By the beginning of the next year he will have received a diploma.
2) Have you done your homework already?
3) Tom bought a new watch yesterday as he had lost his old one.
4) My brother called me yesterday. I haven't heard from him for a long
time.
5) He has been here for 5 minutes.
6) She could not tell the same after she had travelled West.
7) I regret I have said it.