I also provide a curriculum vitae that has all of my past employment with full dates, plus presentations, affiliations, etc.
Then I suspect what I've been calling a resume might be closer to what you call a CV. It has all that sort of stuff (well, not that I have presentations--but affiliations, past certifications, and every damned date).
The functional resumes I've seen have a brief section that just lists job titles, dates, and places of employment, under the section that addresses skills.
What about this:
Kelly — from the Gaelic word for "warrior woman"; "farm by the spring". At an ancient shrine of the goddess Brigit at Kildare, there were sacred priestesses and warrior women called kelles, and its possible the name and surname came from them. Kellie, Kelli, Kaley.
From this Celtic name website.
I think I would have just stood there with a dazed look on my face....
Possibly followed by crying and/or cursing. Then I'd be searching out WiFi....
Me, too. But I'm no longer amazed at his ability to talk his way into whatever he wants/needs.
Vortex, I think with a functional resume, it's okay to leave stuff (dates and non-relevant stuff) off. Mine is back to chronological, but after I graduated from law school, I put all my immigration related stuff upfront, even though it was all out of order.
The guy across the way has finally stopped slurping whatever is in his mug and is now belching intermittently.
I really need a lie down.
Some new photos of the
Titanic:
[link]
Omg, the child in this doctors office is SHRIEKING so loud, and has been for a good ten minutes. Constantly, every breath. They just came into the office I'm in to get stuff to tie him down. Good lord.
I could not look at the Titanic photos. Weird.
I am all shotted up. No hep a or b, tetnus, polio or typhoid for me. We still will have an a & b booster and malaria.