Dictionary
To professionalism
noun
The status, methods, character or standards expected of a professional or of a professional organization, such as reliability, discretion, evenhandedness, and fair play.
Exact(60)
As such, issues pertaining to professionalism and professional behaviour could also be partly to blame for the implementation challenges.
Always sayin' they're gonna kill each other"), and their pretensions to professionalism, the only genuinely professional character in the film was a black guy: Detective Holdaway (Randy Brooks), the calm cop who helps Freddie Tim Rothh) finesse his cover story.
"We are a professional rugby club that is very new to professionalism - we need to learn how to be professional rugby players day-in, day-out".
This approach to professionalism has also been viewed as an expression of a professional culture (Evans 2008, 25).
Interpersonal style refers to professionalism among network members, which ultimately determines the degree to which professionals are able to work together [ 21, 45, 65, 72, 73].
These debates continue, yet today I am committed to professionalism.
"Hungover," he ventures sheepishly, wild celebrations giving way to professionalism.
It is that dedication to professionalism and consistency that Douglas sees in broadcasters such as Wogan.
We were new to professionalism and I thought that bringing people over would help us take some short cuts.
One of the countries left behind by the shift to professionalism in the mid-1990s, they are slowly rediscovering their sense of direction.
Gentlemanly play, albeit fraught with class aggression, gave way to professionalism in the nineteen-thirties, as a response to European poaching.
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