We don't do it that often, but I still like the idea of being able to whip out the cheque
book for certain things.
Not exact matches
The
book provides a practical guide
for how to understand what's weighing you down and how to rearrange and let
certain things go in order to live your best life.
We have looked at these middle period
books in their own right to see whether some at any rate of the
things he is saying are philosophically suggestive
for people who are exploring
certain ranges of facts, or looking at them in a new way.
Tourist
books are only good
for certain things.
When I was fine - tuning the recipes
for my
book,
certain ones that had always been part of my weekly to - do list became even more so entrenched in the way we do
things around here.
The
book doesn't so much delve into that and I had more questions about how, but one
thing it discusses is the helicopter - parented child who never has to figure anything out
for himself, gets to college and after college and doesn't really know how to make
things happen because he's never been given the opportunity / challenge or had
certain character traits instilled.
The back of the
book includes a neat little shopping list of the
things she keeps on hand, as well as recipe substitutes / fixes, a guide to sugar and safe sweeteners, a 10 - day dinner plan requiring only 3 cook - ups, a «leftovers index»
for if you have
certain ingredients you want to use up, as well as an actual index!
Dallas and D.C. were «input» experiments where students were paid
for taking
certain specific steps that they controlled: In Dallas, second - graders were paid $ 2 each time they read a
book and passed a quiz on it; in D.C., middle - schoolers received money rewards
for such
things as good behavior, attendance, turning in homework, and wearing a school uniform.
With so many
books in the marketplace, it's helpful to have people saying nice
things about yours in particular, but understand that just because you pay
for a review, that doesn't mean it will be positive, so be
certain your
book is where you want it to be before you submit it
for review.
A literary publicist knows one
thing for certain: generosity with promotional copies of
books will enhance a
book promotion campaign while, conversely, stinginess with review copies of
books will sabotage a
book publicity campaign.
Initial reviews are mixed, but one
thing is
for certain: Amazon is taking a play from Apple's
book.
This data, ranging from the obvious
things like titles purchased to the more obscure data on how long consumers read
certain passages, how much time was spent interacting with different sections of
books, and how much of a
book was finished, can be used
for very real world information gathering.
As
for the square bullets, as I point out on various occasions in the
book - as well as here on the site, there will always be
certain things that do not work as expected on
certain devices, and there is very little that can be done about it.
I should note that I agree with some of the critiques
for the
book, and I'll try to address
certain points and improve on
things as I go forward in the series.
Leave comments and thank readers
for their thoughts - maybe even ask them a question or their thoughts on
certain things that happened in the
book.
We've not run this program enough times (well, once and a half)
for us to be 100 %
certain it is a reliable process, but the results have made one
thing clear: — previous success of an author's
books have much to do with the success of the author's new
book.
If I held my manga morals
for certain things that high, I wouldn \» t be able to buy a lot of
books because of their publication resulting almost entirely from scanlation popularity (as an example).
Authors put their work in the hands of these people with a
certain expectation that
things will get done and their
book will be better
for it.
For a contest, the author will sometimes conduct an online scavenger hunt that requires contestants to find
certain thing in the author's
book or website with the first three to provide all the right answers winning a prize.
The truth is that e-ink
books are great
for certain things.
Often you have to have some sort of skills
for a
certain types of jobs, not only your education or your
books, because some
things you can't find in them.
It's going to file it in my business receipts folder under this category, and those are documents that I share with my accountant so that I know when my accountant is balancing my
books for the quarter, she's going to have access to that receipt, and so I do that with a lot of my ongoing monthly business expenses and then I also have similar categories setup every time that I open a new client matter, Hazel's going to create a subset of folders and
certain things that have
certain criteria, like if it has a particular case number in it, those are all have... If you're looking
for a particular
thing with a particular case number, it's going to file it in that client folder.
NYTimes Sunday
Book Review — The Mechanic Muse — The Jargon of the Novel, Computed — Ben Zimmer — It turns out that there are
certain things we only say in «novelese» and rarely if ever in real true life, such as «bolt upright»
for example.