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internal vacancy


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WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2025
in•ter•nal /ɪnˈtɜrnəl/USA pronunciation   adj. 
  1. situated or existing in the interior of something;
    of or relating to the inside or inner part:the internal organs of the body.
  2. Government of or relating to the domestic affairs of a country:[before a noun]a bureau of internal affairs.
  3. relating to or occurring within an organization, as a corporation:an internal memo from one department head to another.
  4. Drugs to be taken into the body, esp. orally:[before a noun]medicine for internal use only.
in•ter•nal•ly, adv. 

WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2025
in•ter•nal  (in tûrnl),USA pronunciation adj. 
  1. situated or existing in the interior of something;
    interior.
  2. of, pertaining to, or noting the inside or inner part.
  3. Drugs[Pharm.]oral (def. 4).
  4. existing, occurring, or found within the limits or scope of something;
    intrinsic:a theory having internal logic.
  5. Governmentof or pertaining to the domestic affairs of a country:the internal politics of a nation.
  6. existing solely within the individual mind:internal malaise.
  7. coming from, produced, or motivated by the psyche or inner recesses of the mind;
    subjective:an internal response.
  8. Anatomy, Zoologyinner;
    not superficial;
    away from the surface or next to the axis of the body or of a part:the internal carotid artery.
  9. Anatomy, Zoologypresent or occurring within an organism or one of its parts:an internal organ.

n. 
  1. Usually, internals. entrails;
    innards.
  2. an inner or intrinsic attribute.
  • Medieval Latin internālis, equivalent. to Latin intern(us) intern3 + ālis -al1
  • 1500–10
in′ter•nali•ty, in•ternal•ness, n. 
in•ternal•ly, adv. 

Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
internal / ɪnˈtɜːnəl/
  1. of, situated on, or suitable for the inside; inner
  2. coming or acting from within; interior
  3. involving the spiritual or mental life; subjective
  4. of or involving a nation's domestic as opposed to foreign affairs
  5. situated within, affecting, or relating to the inside of the body
  1. a medical examination of the vagina, uterus, or rectum
Etymology: 16th Century: from Medieval Latin internālis, from Late Latin internus inwardˌinterˈnality, inˈternalnessinˈternally

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