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onboard
[ on-bawrd, awn- ]
adjective
- provided, occurring, etc., on a vehicle:
among the ship's many onboard services.
- installed and functional within a vehicle or electronic device:
onboard computers for aircraft.
verb (used with object)
- to assist and support (a new employee) in developing the skills, knowledge, attitudes, etc., needed to do their job.
- to interact and exchange information with (a new customer) so as to ensure customer satisfaction, maximize company revenue, etc.:
Part of onboarding new clients involves setting expectations and timelines.
- to digitize and upload customer data collected offline, typically to improve the results of personalized data-driven marketing:
The data we onboarded matched existing data online, providing us with better insight into the individual鈥檚 purchasing habits.
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of onboard1
Example Sentences
鈥淓mployers are doing more than just raising wages 鈥 they鈥檙e actively rethinking how they recruit, onboard and support frontline talent,鈥 said Price.
The Maltese government said everyone aboard the ship is "confirmed safe" and that a fire onboard the ship was "brought under control overnight".
Everyone onboard was seasick and some discussed turning back.
Most of those onboard bought passage from smugglers in their hometowns in Pakistan.
According to the survivors, the crew onboard - West Africans employed by the smugglers - starved the Pakistani migrants of food and water, and beat them daily.
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