Explanation:
A rejection email should not be disrespectful. If the decision not to hire is yours, then it is recommended to send it personally from your work email address.
It is customary, to begin with, the rejection notice and not to have the applicant read a long introduction before. It is also definitely acceptable to be polite and to thank the applicant and provide some positive feedback along with the rejection. These actions are important for maintaining a positive application experience and for providing the applicants with some tools for their next application.
Explanation:
The characteristics of red and black are the subject of the second paragraph. To find the answers, look for characteristics linked with black people.
Three responses—elegance, power, and evil—are connected to black. The paragraph does highlight the fact that black is chosen as a uniform color in the context of sports due to its link with "power." Red is also related to "power." It can cause you to rule it out as the right response if you are not a diligent reader.
Explanation:
Harass is the correct spelling.
Explanation:
“Deranged” means mad or insane, exactly the opposite of “sane.”
“Neat” most commonly means a place or thing arranged in an orderly, tidy way. It is the opposite of “disorganized,” which some people may think is related to “deranged” because of the similar spelling.
“Dirty” means not clean.
“Bleak” has several meanings but generally refers to something dreary, charmless, and bleak.
Explanation:
The average (arithmetic mean) is the sum of all values divided by the number of values. You can use this formula to get to the correct answer, but there is a faster way:
Using the formula of the average:
Average = (sum of elements)/(number of elements)
20 = (17+17+19+20+X)/5
20*5 = 17+17+19+20+X
100 = 73 + X
X = 100-73
X = 27
Explanation:
Here is the correct order:
Alexander, Lori (3)
Bridges, Darryl (5)
Bridges, Dewey (2)
Bush, Ollie (1)
Nunez, Alfredo (4)
Nunez, Tracey (6)
Explanation:
The sentence can be completed with pairs of words with either of these meanings (the phrasing is a reduction of the sentence):
Even though he knew it was bad, he insisted… OR
Because he knew I was good, he insisted…
The first option makes more sense; indeed, "although detrimental" presents a pair of words that fit it.
The meaning of the rest of the words and their essence is in brackets:
because disadvantageous (bad) – creates an illogical connection
despite that (although), instrumental (assisting, good) – creates an illogical connection
even though unassailable (certain, neutral) – the pair does not create a coherent sentence
since incremental (accumulative) – the pair does not create a coherent sentence