Residency in a sentence as a noun

4 years of medical school, and 3 years of residency pretty much wipe out age 22-29.

And by this change one can reason that residency on the 'front end' is more valuable than crunching in the 'back end.

It's also awful on the permanent residency front.

He plans to live and have his residency in Singapore and pay taxes there but US would still like to have his tax money, who's the ***?

There is also a straight-forward path to permanent residency after X years working in the country.

[1]As long as we require physicians to be US trained and to have completed a US residency, the bottleneck will be GME funding.

Again, permanent residency is required to be able to receive any kind of travel documents.

It does not currently address data residency or jurisdiction concerns.

Many English-speaking countries use a points-based system for immigration that favors skilled workers, so you'll also have a much better chance of getting permanent residency.

So, I'm glad you got into the subject of car washes and oil changes. We're trying to regulate car washes so that we can control that market - otherwise, let's say we succeed in a federated model where to be a car wash practitioner you must go through 14 years of very competitive school costing about $1M all told, with a car wash residency on top.

In determining residency, California law provides two presumptions.

Residency definitions

noun

the act of dwelling in a place

See also: residence abidance

noun

the position of physician who is receiving special training in a hospital (usually after completing an internship)