Practice essential collocations for developer onboarding in IT and software development.
0 / 5 completed
1 / 5
The engineering manager designed a structured plan to ___ new hires into the team during their first month.
Integrate new hires is the standard onboarding collocation for helping new employees become fully functioning members of a team. 'Fit along' and 'settle around' are informal. 'Bring out' does not convey the structured integration of onboarding.
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Each new engineer was assigned a mentor to ___ guidance throughout the first three months on the job.
Provide guidance is the standard professional collocation for offering ongoing advice and direction to a colleague. 'Give along' and 'offer around' are informal. 'Hand out' implies distributing items rather than providing continuous guidance.
3 / 5
The onboarding checklist helped new starters ___ familiarity with the tooling before tackling their first ticket.
Gain familiarity is the standard professional and onboarding collocation for becoming accustomed to new tools, processes, or systems. 'Get along' and 'build around' are informal. 'Pick out' means to select and does not fit this context.
4 / 5
The tech lead reviewed the new engineer's first pull request carefully to ___ confidence and reinforce good habits.
Build confidence is the standard professional development collocation for steadily increasing a person's self-assurance through positive reinforcement. 'Grow along' and 'make around' are informal. 'Set out' does not convey the gradual building of confidence.
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By the end of the first sprint, the new hire was expected to ___ a contribution to the team's deliverables.
Make a contribution is the standard professional collocation for adding value to a team's collective work. 'Do along' and 'give around' are informal. 'Put out' has different meanings and is not standard for contributing to work.