More
about opening sentences in another post; in this one I want to focus on trimming the fat.
Not exact matches
Writers at TechEye aren't happy
about the deal (evident from the jab of Apple tax dodging in the
opening sentence.)
Providing a wealth of information on the development of hermeneutic themes and intellectual parallels with thinkers Gadamer knew, it is a richly documented biography (though the typo in the
opening sentence of chapter one, which gets Gadamer's birthday wrong, inspires doubts
about precision).
Everything flows from the
opening sentence of the book, an expansion of a 2010 article from the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy: «What we have come to call the gay marriage debate is not directly
about homosexuality, but
about marriage.»
Gordon Brown just
opened a major oil conference in Central London, and he'll be looking to sell that (he always arrives at these thing with two
sentences he wants imprinted on everyone's brain, and faces a roomful of journalists who want to talk
about something else).
Moments later, Beck is taking on «the entire offensive line» of an American pro-football team with little effort, and it is as though Arnie has been reincarnated on screen — except that, while Beck may be a kick - ass «retrieval expert» of bull - like proportions and astonishing resilience, he is also genuinely eager to avoid violence («I don't want to fight» being his catchphrase), phobic
about gun - use (until the inevitable pump - action finale, naturally), and really just interested in
opening his own restaurant — and, unlike the he - men portrayed by Arnie, Sly and other eighties right - wingers (most of whom have in fact gone on to
open their own restaurants), Beck can bang articulate
sentences together as well as heads.
Notice that the first half of the
sentence — After the door burst
open — wouldn't make any sense without the second half,
about the crowd screaming.
Here is a view of a prompt encouraging students to think more
about their topic after writing their
opening sentence.
Mark also came up with a titillating
opening sentence and added a lot more
about my background.
The best hope of getting your prison
sentences reduced a bit is by
opening the internet to honest posting on what the peer - reviewed academic research of the past 32 years tells us
about how stock investing works.
If Gavin want to encourage them to
open up the discussion he should add a
sentence / footnote
about this at the end of each article of theirs he critiques.
IMO it should be the
opening sentence in every report
about the public policy response to climate change.
This is the lazy standby for the headline or
opening sentence of an article that talks
about three separate phenomena related in some way not readily evident to the writer.
Finding prospective jurors who can keep an
open mind both
about issues at the innocence / guilty phase and at the
sentence phases, jurors who can stand up against community prejudice.
An agreement in
open court as to the facts of the crime leading to the
sentencing can not be overturned by showing a mere miscommunication
about some facts between client and counsel, nor an oversight in reciting some additional facts.
Since this is a traffic violation and we do not
sentence traffic violators to significant terms in jail, the prosecutor can not introduce any evidence
about your criminal records at all, unless you
open the door.
And, interestingly, we never hear complaints or concerns
about unelected federal prosecutors making policy judgments at
sentencing (even though prosecutorial policy judgments are not made in
open court nor subject to any kind of review).
If you read the
opening sentence to this post and didn't understand a thing I was talking
about, Owen «s presentation is a great place to start.
Opening paragraph stating the role you applying and maybe a short
sentence that explains how you found out
about the positon.
Your
opening statement should start with one
sentence about who you are and what you bring to the job, then describe the skills and attributes you have that suit you to the job.
The first paragraph should be 2 - 4
sentences about how you found their
open position and why you'd want to work for that company.
Include an
opening paragraph with two to three
sentences that inform the potential employer
about some of your strongest points and qualifications that make you eligible for the teaching position.
The
opening statement for your resume should be just one
sentence saying who you are and a bit
about why you're a good choice for the hire.