All resume synonyms
ré·su·mé
R r verb resume
- flipflop — Alternative form of flip-flop.
- get better — recover
- inversed — reversed in position, order, direction, or tendency.
- catch up — If you catch up with someone who is in front of you, you reach them by walking faster than they are walking.
- carry over — If something carries over or is carried over from one situation to another, it continues to exist or apply in the new situation.
- make a comeback — popular again
- continue — If someone or something continues to do something, they keep doing it and do not stop.
- inversing — reversed in position, order, direction, or tendency.
- gentrified — very or excessively refined or elegant.
- come back — If something that you had forgotten comes back to you, you remember it.
- gentrify — to alter (a deteriorated urban neighborhood) through the buying and renovation of houses and stores by upper- or middle-income families or individuals, raising property values but often displacing low-income families and small businesses.
- kick off — the act of kicking; a blow or thrust with the foot or feet.
- make good — morally excellent; virtuous; righteous; pious: a good man.
- get well — conveying wishes for one's recovery, as from an illness: a get-well card.
- hark back — to listen attentively; hearken.
- flip-flopping — Informal. a sudden or unexpected reversal, as of direction, belief, attitude, or policy.
- go with — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
- come again — Some people say 'Come again?' when they want you to repeat what you have just said.
- fall off the wagon — (Idiomatic) To cease or fail at a regimen of self-improvement or reform; to lapse back into an old habit or addiction.
noun resume
- apercus — a hasty glance; a glimpse.
- biography — A biography of someone is an account of their life, written by someone else.
- cv — Your CV is a brief written account of your personal details, your education, and the jobs you have had. You can send a CV when you are applying for a job. CV is an abbreviation for 'curriculum vitae'.
- cvs — (in Britain) Council of Voluntary Service
- nutshell — the shell of a nut.
- closeup — a photograph taken at close range or with a long focal-length lens, on a relatively large scale.
- blow by blow — precisely detailed; describing every minute detail and step: a blow-by-blow account of the tennis match; a blow-by-blow report on the wedding ceremony.
- abstract — An abstract idea or way of thinking is based on general ideas rather than on real things and events.
- conspectus — an overall view; survey
- bios — Basic Input Output System: the built-in software which controls the primary functions of a PC
- close-up — the end or conclusion: at the close of day; the close of the speech.
- communique — A communiqué is an official statement or announcement.
- ground plan — Also called groundplot. the plan of a floor of a building.
- digest — to convert (food) in the alimentary canal into absorbable form for assimilation into the system.
- breviary — a book of psalms, hymns, prayers, etc, to be recited daily by clerics in major orders and certain members of religious orders as part of the divine office
- curriculum vitae — A curriculum vitae is the same as a CV.
- epitome — A person or thing that is a perfect example of a particular quality or type.
- life history — the series of living phenomena exhibited by an organism in the course of its development from inception to death.
- writeup — Alternative spelling of write-up.
- outline — the line by which a figure or object is defined or bounded; contour.
- apercu — outline
- bio — a biography, often a very brief one
- close up — If someone closes up a building, they shut it completely and securely, often because they are going away.
- biog — biography.