Synonym: expertness. Similar words: advertisement, expert, advertising, expect, expense, expected, experience, experiment. Meaning: [‚ekspɜː'tiːz] n. skillfulness by virtue of possessing special knowledge.
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61. The Bush team's depth of managerial expertise has been rightly praised.
62. Legislation now produced separate apparatuses and spheres of activity, with distinctive forms of knowledge and expertise.
63. Listen carefully, clarify with questions if necessary, but don't challenge that person's expertise.
64. Furthermore, the practice of good dermatology does not depend solely on adequate eyesight and clinical expertise.
65. There are two views of the purposes for which corporate managers will use their expertise.
66. A number of foreign banks have developed considerable expertise in the area of project finance.
67. Organization and expertise were available there for the financing of increasingly complicated business.
68. Where window-glazing repairs were concerned, Timothy turned to Kent Blaxill, a Colchester firm with great expertise.
69. The experienced drafter, with expertise in contract and commercial matters, may need little or no guidance on these matters.
70. You can bounce ideas off them and benefit from their expertise, as they have often been self-employed themselves.
71. Hence, subject and support teachers will need to develop expertise in modifying curriculum materials and managing behaviour problems.
72. The presentation was an excellent example of design expertise using the C.A.D. and the latest computerised sample machine.
73. We hope to cross-fertilize the company with the expertise we've gained from other industries.
74. The restructuring will enable it to focus better on the two areas of its expertise in both wide area and local networks.
75. For Ure, however, special expertise is less important than the essentials of contact and clout.
76. Red Water Arts also draws upon the expertise of other professionals who work with us on a freelance basis.
77. This has enabled M.P.s to build up considerable expertise in their chosen fields.
78. Each teacher approaches a procedure in an individual way and has different areas of expertise and interest.
79. Rules incorporate more traditional expertise in handling situations like bumping and alternate carrier vouchers.
80. Such power may derive from an individual's physical strength, their economic resources, position, expertise(sentencedict.com), personal charisma etc.
81. The scientists reassigned to the survey possess expertise in areas such as population dynamics, physiology, animal behavior, habitats and biodiversity.
82. Far better, he argues, would be a system in which governments choose firms according to their technical expertise.
83. I had a lot of seniority, and expertise in a specialized body of nursing.
84. However, he said, he hopes his expertise in the field can be carried over to the new position.
85. There is particular expertise in computing applications, especially those using large data sets.
86. The aim is to provide a comprehensive range of services and expertise on a national scale to the business community in particular.
87. The organisation has employees with expertise in both medical and counselling services.
88. The Forces Legal Network has a 24-hour hotline which links callers to solicitors with an expertise in military law.
89. In some areas fundholders had formed liaison groups and were meeting regularly to share experiences and develop their collective expertise.
90. In places the text is a little unsatisfactory but this reflects the early stage of development rather than the author's own expertise.
More similar words: advertisement, expert, advertising, expect, expense, expected, experience, experiment, artistic, antiseptic, expedition, unexpected, experienced, chastisement, experimental, vertical, at the expense of, at other times, that is, as it is, tissue, raise, arise, British, advise, cruise, comprise, adviser, premise, precise.