Sentences with phrase «bit about editing»

It does step on my point a bit about editing.

Not exact matches

What we have is a very much edited bit of fiction about some guy who likely did exist.
The fact that I spent most of yesterday rewriting and editing this post, emailing trusted friends with drafts, making my husband re-read it over lunch, praying, rewriting a bit more, seriously contemplating deleting the whole thing and writing about cupcakes instead, and generally chewed my fingernails off is an indicator that I'm terrified to publish it.
The fact that I spent most of yesterday rewriting and editing this post, emailing trusted friends with drafts, making my husband re-read it over lunch, praying, rewriting a bit more, seriously contemplating deleting the whole thing and writing about cupcakes...
Americans are a bit more positive about the impact of gene editing to reduce disease; 36 % think it will have more benefits than downsides, while 28 % think it will have more downsides than benefits.
I should also say a bit about how I edited my interview with Kaitlin.
I've been working out with your beginner program for a while now, and I think it's about time I edited it to suit my goals more... I'm just having a bit of trouble figuring out which changes I should make.
A little bit about myself: I enjoy to travel, video edit (Adobe Premiere Pro and After Effects), photoshop, work on computers, play some computer games (Battlefield 3 and StarCraft 2), dirt bike, snowboard, rollerblade, rock climb, ice...
Talk a bit about molding the story in the editing room.
Just as Amazon gives authors quite a bit of control over their Author Page, they also give authors the opportunity to edit much of the information that appears on their book's Product Detail Page including the Product Description, About the Author, From the Author, From the Inside Flap, From the Back Cover, and Reviews.
It'll give you an idea about which level of editing you may need, and it talks a bit about prices (though there's a huge variation from editor to editor).
Let's talk a little bit, Justine, about the types of editing that you're talking about.
I work so hard on my writing that the fun bit where I'm making up stories for my own enjoyment is dwarfed by the analysis, the problem solving, the revisions, the editing, the learning about writing craft — things that can be rewarding in the end, but are often stressful in the moment (and don't even get me started on marketing, bookkeeping, or taxes).
I've also written a best selling essay writing guide and have supervised and edited PhD theses so I know a bit about writing.
I edited the piece a little bit to talk about PDF files.
My job focused on the administrative side of giving aid to the Jewish community there, but my boss, the AJJDC Country Director for Romania, traveled there several times in the lead - up to the revolution and, as the person who wrote and edited his field trip reports, I knew quite a bit about the mood of the country and the conditions there for its citizens under Ceausescu.
The sample edit allows both you and the editor to learn a bit about each other's styles and see if you are a good fit.
This winter past I spent a fair bit of time thinking about how best to finish the editing process of my short story collection, The Year of the Elm.
(EDIT: I checked one other book after writing this, and it fared a bit better: about 80 % off.)
I haven't read an article about this, but I think what I may end up doing is (after I've revised and edited a couple times) is submit to agents and see if I get a bite.
I'm in the editing stage of my first ever eBook about travel blogging, and am a bit overwhelmed with all the things that might go wrong or that I could miss!
I've written pretty much everything I want to about the games I beat this year, although I may do some last minute edits a bit later tonight.
Why not edit it just a little bit and make it his own game... That way he doesn't have to worry about C&D.
I had intended on posting about the Cosmotrons Game Tour but the video editing process ended up taking up a bit more time than expected so I will save that for tomorrow.
Joe Romm, a former Energy Department official who now edits the climateprogress.org blog and works for the Center for American Progress, also has rejected more of the same, saying it provided enemies of change with a «terrific sound bite» about higher energy prices.
UPDATE: The bit about «dissuading teachers from teaching science» was presumably just a sloppy edit, right?
The news posts end up taking about 15 - 30 minutes to put together, since they mostly consist of finding a story elsewhere, copying it / editing it into my blog and then maybe adding a bit of commentary / analysis.
Worth a look on the subject of looking back at climategate / swifthack — this link goes to a piece that provides a good example of how to do fact - checking, how to edit and correct material online as facts call for updates, and a good bit of information about who is making stuff up, here: http://www.scholarsandrogues.com/2010/06/08/climate-scientists-still-besieged/
There was a fair bit of publicity lately about various Canadian federal politicians editing each other's Wikipedia profiles etc..
Looking at your resume 2015 and editing bits and pieces is not what editing really is about because it's about the entire piece flowing properly and looking well put together.
I just learned quite a bit about layer masks, and they have started to play a HUGE role in my photoshop editing, so I think that would be something I would be interested in learning more about.
But I am chuckling a bit that you are going to redo the room, again:) It's kinda how I feel about my garden, especially this time of year: build more raised beds, redo that whole area, edit the wedding garden, move that tree, heh.
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