Joke Collection Website - Public benefit messages - Being admitted to the public examination is called "going ashore" and preparing for the exam is called "wading".

Being admitted to the public examination is called "going ashore" and preparing for the exam is called "wading".

Why is the success of the public examination called "landing" and the preparation for the exam called "wading"

Nowadays, with the prosperity and development of the national economy, the perfection of the institutional system, the desire of government departments, enterprises and institutions for talents, and the pursuit of personal values by the younger generation, more and more people are engaged in the public examination industry, and the word "ashore" is also widely circulated among the majority of candidates who take the public examination.

What is "ashore"? How did the word "ashore" come from?

The word "ashore" is relative to "going to sea" in the 1980s and 1990s. In the eighties and nineties of last century, when the country was in urgent need and the reform and opening up flourished, many people in the system left their jobs to start businesses and seek development in the business world, while the corresponding people who stayed in the system were those who "landed". As the saying goes, there are scenery in the sea and incense on the shore, which is better or worse depends on personal pursuit.

With the fairness and justice of civil service examination, the competition of civil service examination is becoming increasingly fierce. Everyone who embarks on the road of "public service" stands out through hard struggle. Compared with the final success, the previous review is tantamount to boating in the sea of suffering, especially since many people have participated in it several times or even dozens of times before success, and it takes years to succeed. The word "ashore" can undoubtedly describe this feeling of bitterness before sweetness.

Accordingly, the act of taking the civil service examination and putting it into action is vividly called "wading".

Through the interpretation of Bian Xiao, do readers have a more intuitive feeling about "going ashore" and "wading"? In the face of increasingly fierce competition in public examinations, are you ready to "wade"? If you are going to "wade", please pay attention to the interview team and we will help you "go ashore".