To... someone, I'm
assuming at least the author, although then again, marketing being what it is...) books that have turned the Hugo award on the cover from must - buy to ew, putting this down now.
Not exact matches
I'm curious why the editor,
at least I'm
assuming it was the editor that, decided to attach the
author's Yale student ID to this article.
To
assume that Christian
authors of the New Testament in the first century could have known what God had said elsewhere, and that Christian thinkers of the 20th century, on the basis of that Scripture, could pass judgment on any non-Christian revelation without thoroughly objective and unbiased study would be,
at the very
least, parochial.
When I show them the math (short version: if I can find 200 hardworking saleable
authors a year I can make a living in one of the cheapest areas of the Phoenix valley) they choose not to believe, but
at least they go elsewhere,
assuming I'm mad as a hatter.
It's a real shame when a book gets a DA «Recommends,» and agency pricing sends would - be purchasers scurrying away (
at least I'm
assuming it's Agency pricing
at work), and thus, both the
author and publisher have lost out on sales.
Simplified records
at the very
least goes without saying as is
assumed by the
author but I suspect performed by very few, though members of AAII are probably better than average.
Donna Laframboise appears to have
assumed that you were
at least registered for a PhD before you were selected as an IPCC lead
author — relatively minor error on her part which does not detract from her main message; indeed it tends to reinforce her message.
A JP is a justice of the peace, a title given to the magistrates, and it is generally
assumed that
at least some of these
authors are, in fact, JPs.