Question 2: Ask for your opinions. Who are the "Eight Officials" in villages and towns? During the rural cultural revolution: 8 members.
They are ticket sellers, drivers, postmen, nurses, hairdressers, waiters, salespeople and cooks.
At present, the "eight big members" in rural areas refer to: farmer technicians (water conservancy technicians), animal epidemic prevention personnel, forest rangers, family planning administrators, public health workers, coordinators of land resources and planning and construction environmental protection, cultural coordinators, and coordinators of comprehensive management of social security.
In addition, farmers also vividly summarize college students as "village officials", that is, policy propagandists, decision-making consultants, science and technology popularizers, information researchers, archivists, village coordinators, small culture teachers and activity organizers.
Question 3: What are the "three members", "five members" and "eight members" in building construction? Three members: builder, material engineer and quality inspector.
Five members: budget officer and quality inspector. Material engineer, builder and safety officer are eight members: builder budget engineer, quality inspector, tester, surveyor, safety officer, material engineer and information officer.
Question 4: Which eight officials do you mean? Eight members refer to the builder (civil engineering and installation, including water heating and electricity installation), quality engineer, safety officer (excluding full-time safety production management personnel), standard engineer, material engineer, mechanic, documenter and laborer (added in 15).
"Eight Generals" originated during the Hundred Regiments War in War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression, China, and originally referred to cooks, breeders, guards, trumpeters, civil servants, hygienists, hairdressers, combatants and commanders. After 1949, the appellation of labor groups in all walks of life has changed. Eight members generally refer to ticket sellers, drivers, postmen, nurses, hairdressers, waiters, salespeople and chefs, which are widely circulated. In addition, there are other formulas.
Question 5: What are the eight members? They are builders (civil engineering, electrical engineering, pipeline engineering), material engineers, mechanical engineers, information engineers, safety officers, quality engineers, standard engineers and cost engineers. In the construction industry, the more certificates you get, the higher your salary. The first is your stepping stone to find a job. Now the construction company goes to the school to recruit, and will ask you what certificate you took. The company needs 8 members to bid and upgrade their qualifications. Because every new project needs a certain number of employees with various certificates, the company will give priority to admission, increase wages and buy social security if there are any certificates during this period.
Question 6: What are Eight Officials? Three members: builder, material engineer and quality inspector.
Five members: budget officer and quality inspector. Materials engineer, builder and safety officer
Eight officials: builder's budget, quality inspector, tester, surveyor, safety officer, material engineer and information engineer.
Question 7: What are the eight members of a building? We need to elaborate. The customer estimates how much money is needed according to the construction drawing and structural drawing, that is, the project cost. The safety officer is responsible for supervising the safety of on-site construction, the builder is the staff to carry out on-site construction, the quality inspector is responsible for the quality inspection after the completion of the project, the documenter collects data, the material clerk is responsible for the procurement of materials, and the measurement is geological survey. The supervisor is in the process of building.
Question 8: Who are the top eight officials? Eight key technical posts of construction enterprises: builder, quality engineer, safety officer, standard engineer, material engineer, mechanic, laborer and information officer.