Sentences with phrase «author name from»

Today's update moves the article title and author name from taskbar to within the article saving space on your phone's display.
Now you can delete your author name from the preceding pages.
Your domain name is one of the least expensive and most important parts of your website, Purchase domain names for the title of your book and your author name from companies like HostGator or GoDaddy.

Not exact matches

The debut from author Santi Balmes and illustrator Lyona tells the stories of two little girls — a human named Martina and a monster named Anitram (get it?!)
While thought provoking, the real value of the book comes from the practical, templated framework the authors provide for designing your own category that includes a clear articulation of the problem at hand, creating a memorable name for a category, and developing a unique point of view about the current and future of the category.
International Hall of Fame business speaker, trainer, and bestselling business author Michael Kerr shares how one restaurant serves up the fun and connects with their customers, plus a great fun at work tip that helps companies give back to the local community, a quote of the week from Sir Richard Branson, and some wacky food truck names that are hilariously punny.
I come to these conversations based on what I read from the author and only contribute my own voice to counter what I feel is a diatribe of irrational and fantasy charmed people with letters after their names who have no idea of what they write about.
In the article, the MSM propagandist states such things as: 2017 has seen, according to his one time Goldman Sachs source, a «dramatic crash in [physical gold coin] demand,» that interest in gold coins is linked to «political conservatism, or anarcho - libertarianism» and «end of the world right wing sentiments,» that gold has been implicated in a «conspiracy to commit money laundering,» that gold is «financed by people in the narcotics trade,» that it comes from «illegal mines and drug dealers in Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador,» that «the federal authorities assume the NTR Metals [case] represented only a fraction of illegally sourced and financed gold,» that therefore the US attorney is broadly investigating the gold industry, that gold is «produced by exploited workers,» that «crude [gold] extraction techniques create serious and lasting environmental damage,» that gold plays an important part in «tax evasion,» that it is related to American gun sales, which the author abhors; that «drug dealers [use] gold imports as a way of laundering their proceeds,» and that «they came to realize that illegal gold [is] an intrinsically better business» than drug dealing; to name but a few of the aspersions cast against gold in the short article.
He draws conclusions from Darwinism and modern astronomy, freely invoking decidedly un-Islamic names like Voltaire and Dominique Aury, a pseudonym of the author of the pornographic Story of O. Rediger's domestic situation also appeals to the middle - aged Frenchman.
Quotations from these four books will be indicated by the author's name and the page reference in parenthesis.
The author's name vaguely rang bells from gossip columns.
2) name usage statistics do not guarantee the miraculous — but they certainly place an author in that immediate context (or at the very least, with direct access to someone who was from that immediate context), which is a MAJOR contingency that has been much debated in the question of authorship... which IS the topic you raised.
By a geographical expansion shattering anything that either his cosmopolitan detractors within paganism or, for that matter, the author of the Book of Acts within Christianity could have imagined, his name has moved out far from that «small corner of the earth somewhere» and has come to be known «unto the uttermost part of the earth.»
The unknown authors of the Gospels are kind of the message «From:» name where it's difficult to tell where it came from because it was «spoofed» (appearing to originate from one sender, but in reality comes from someone elFromname where it's difficult to tell where it came from because it was «spoofed» (appearing to originate from one sender, but in reality comes from someone elfrom because it was «spoofed» (appearing to originate from one sender, but in reality comes from someone elfrom one sender, but in reality comes from someone elfrom someone else).
In the current state of debate about these matters, I perhaps ought to expect myself to feel «excluded» as a man from reading Jane Austen's Emma until all female references to the protagonist are edited out, the title changed to M., and the author's name reduced to the discreet neutrality of J. Austen.
So devoted were the American founders to this understanding of religious liberty that, as Thomas Jefferson wrote in his Autobiography (1821), the authors of the Virginia Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom refrained from mentioning the exact name of the «holy author of our religion.»
The city sands out from revious cases for the reasons the author mentions (prayers are almost always christian, name a specific deity) but also because this wasn't some long held tradition.
The biggest names in women's ministry — from Hatmaker to authors like Shauna Niequist — remain intimately involved in their own local churches, and most have Bible college or seminary degrees.
I emphasize that these and other comparisons are being constructed from my interpretation of the trinitarian theologies of Leonardo Boff and Raimon Panikkar and have not been named in this way by the authors themselves.
From The Author: «Italian Fig Cookies, Cucidati, Sicilian Fig Cookies, or Christmas Fig Cookies are a few of the names you might come across when looking for this deliciously moist, tender and sweet, fruit filled cookie.
The book has already garnered praise from some big names in the food world including Mark Bittman, Marion Nestle, Jamie Oliver and my personal school food idol, JanPop, aka Janet Poppendieck, author of Free for All: Fixing School Food in America.
Author J.K. Rowling gave her characters names that range from the classically British (Hermione Granger, Neville Longbottom, Fred and George Weasley) to the seriously strange (Severus Snape, Rubeus Hagrid, and of course, Lord Voldemort)-- all with just the right touch of fantasy flair.
Please give us the name of the book and author if you got your tips from an inspiring book.
She is most recently the author of Pretty, a novel about a young lady named Bebe who goes from drugged - out stripper to cosmetology school then finds Christianity.
Cool Names for Babies is a great book from Pamela Redmond Satran and Linda Rosenkrantz, authors of Beyond Jennifer, Jason, Madison and Montana.
From the authors of Beyond Jennifer & Jason, Madison & Montana comes a thorough, timely, and alphabetically organized guide to baby names and their meanings for parents - to - be.
Conflict of interest statements were collected from all named authors and no conflicts were identified.
You can name your baby from your favorite author, for example, Conrad.
Moa originated from the famous Swedish author whose pen name was Moa Martinson who was most known for her proletarian literature.
While babies are not normally named after their mother and father, the firstborn male is often named after the paternal grandpa while the girl baby is named after the paternal grandmother,» says naming expert Neala Shane, author of «Inspired Baby Names from Around the World.»
Names from the minds of beloved authors like Edgar Allan Poe and Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley provide the perfect starting point.
The documents suggest a deep involvement in writing, editing and overseeing the publication of the papers, with sometimes only minimal involvement from the named authors.
Reviewers «really should avoid looking at the name of the author and the country where he or she comes from and then judge the quality of the research in that context,» Tomaska says.
To figure out his h - index, Mamajek entered his name in the author query field of the Astrophysics Data System from NASA and the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.
The authors of the present study describe a new large giraffid species, named Decennatherium rex sp. nov., from the Spanish province of Madrid.
In a 2006 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, the authors reviewed 1000 research articles from 10 high - ranking, international peer - review journals and found that up to 11 % of articles had authors who weren't named.
In the meantime, parents who smoke who remove their names from industry mailing lists may decrease their children's exposure to coupons and, in turn, the risk of their children smoking, the authors wrote.
He has apologised to the authors for his mistake and the name of Dr Lee has been removed from the first authorship.
«While most studies show there are no significant differences in clinical response between a biosimilar and the original product, some physicians and patient advocacy groups have expressed concern about how interchangeable they really are, and whether it is safe to switch from the brand name version to the biosimilar,» said lead author Dr Daniel Nagore of Progenika Biopharma, Derio, Spain.
Not so clear, however, is the name of the genus, which the authors have translated also from Greek as «with snake,» but find themselves unaware of the meaning behind.
Also notable on the author list are many names from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, the descendant of one of several groups in Oak Ridge that developed materials during the Manhattan Project for the U.S. atomic bomb.
In 2015, another frog new to science made a pop culture splash: Hailing from Costa Rica, Diane's bare - hearted glass frog (Hyalinobatrachium dianae), named after the senior author's mom, bore a noticeable resemblance to a celebrity frog known to reside on Sesame Street.
(«Venus in Furs» was a book by Austrian author Leopold von Sacher - Masoch in 1870; from his name, we get the term «masochist.»)
I generated the authors, such as Ocorrafoo M. L. Cobange, by randomly permuting African first and last names harvested from online databases, and then randomly adding middle initials.
It seems very strange that the journal allows for authors to retract their names from the paper, especially since this seems to include also the «Contributors» section, wherein is said who did what (I don't see their names there and I know that they were there earlier).
Since we reported Friday that multiple authors had asked to remove their names from a high - profile 2011 Lancet paper about a risky transplant surgery, a few readers have wondered: Should this be allowed?
The journal has also issued a new erratum about the paper, removing three names from the author list:
(iii) Initial data analyses were undertaken by [name of individuals if not listed as Authors] who are employees of [name company] and received funding from [insert name of funding organization].
Also, intellectual creative work is protected by copyright law, including the right to prevent others from modifying it without consent and the moral right of an author to be named as such (European IPR Helpdesk, 2013).
The star's proper name of Gacrux, like Acrux, may have been created from its Greek letter Bayer designation by the astronomer, Elijah Hinsdale Burritt (1794 - 1838), the author of several editions of an Atlas of the Heavens published between 1833 and 1856.
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