Inexperience.
small
Considered/a candidate
It does not seem that she had a job in the modern sense of a career. She was a wife (married to George Washington Gale Ferris) and a mother at a time when that was what women were supposed to do. It was also a time when there was little access to contraception, so she had eight (some sources say ten) children-- that in itself was a full-time job.
You say to yourself "Well which job is better?" or "Do I care about pay or how my boss treats me?"
in another space of time
Another way to say "take the time" is "allocate time" or "set aside time." You could also say "make time" for something or "devote time" to a task or activity.
Megan Tingley for Little, Brown. And may I say, she did a terrible job.
You could say you were selected for the position.
If you are applying or a job in another country and get asked how soon you can relocate to the country listed in the job offer, be honest. You should determine how quickly you can get out there. Be realistic, it will not look good if you say you can be there by a certain time, and then cannot.
Under employment means having a job that is way under what you have learned, earned in a degree course, or in terms of experience. Example is when you land a job, say a part time job - earn little money - yet you can apply for a more aspiring position, being overqualified yet is not able to get into such appropriate job for you.
the job was not what I expected The job was not as presented at time of interview I thought I would enjoy this work however I was mistaken.
My full-time job: 私の仕事 (watashi no shigoto) My part-time job: 私のアルバイト (watashi no arubaito)