Sentences with phrase «harder than writing»

He says: «Writing about yourself is infinitely harder than writing about someone -LSB-...]
Statistics say that writing a cover letter is even harder than writing a resume.
Frank Hamrick, «Harder Than Writing A Good Haiku,» 2016.
While the tone of the Ratchet and Clank games has always been pretty lighthearted and witty, I can't stress enough how pulling off truly clever and well timed humor like this game does is light years harder than writing Oscar bait war dramas like Mass Effect.
For many authors, selling a book is even harder than writing it.
Often building that network can be harder than writing your book.
I have to find another one, which can be harder than writing the book.
It can be a hard slog, and many writers find promotion even harder than writing, but if you want to succeed you'll need to be aggressive in your promotion.
For many authors, this is harder than writing the book.
In some cases it can actually be harder than writing the literature itself, because it's one thing to create a novel and it's another thing to get someone to print it and for...
It's hard work marketing a book, might even be harder than writing the book was!
Keeping it interesting and fresh are harder than writing a book.
Many authors say that marketing their books is harder than writing the books.
Book marketing is the hardest part of the process, even harder than writing.
Authoring a branching script is harder than writing a linear course page by page and it also demands more creativity.
It's no wonder that he needs to do something to raise money, even if he is living with his mother though into his twenties, but he picks a profession that's even harder than writing a novel.

Not exact matches

«Kyle has worked incredibly hard to settle this claim amicably, despite what I consider to be the obvious ridiculousness of it, and has done far more than I would have personally done under these circumstances,» Altman wrote.
The pen and display have more than 4,000 levels of sensitivity, so writing feels more natural — drawing lightly will leave fine lines while a hard - pressed hand will create darker ones.
YouTube told the Journal that it had a harder task than Google because of the smaller selection of videos about breaking news events, as compared to written stories.
«If we set up a partnership on a handshake and agree to split the business 70 - 30, and we then have a falling out because you think you are working harder than I am and deserve a bigger share of the profits, the law may say we are 50 - 50 partners unless we can clearly document in writing, for example a signed Form 1065, our intent to create an unequal split,» Ennico says.
Also, more controversial provisions — such as requirements to execute enforceable written contracts under the Best Interest Contract and Principal Transactions Exemption, and changes to PTE 84 - 24 (other than the addition of the Impartial Conduct Standards)-- are not applicable until January 1, 2018, while the Department is honoring the President's directive to take a hard look at any potential undue burdens and decides whether to make significant revisions.
Some topics in some eras are just harder than others to be light about,» writes Rick Salutin
If the authorities are willing to engage in loss - making activities to achieve the GDP growth target, there are two relevant characteristics of an economy like China's that change the nature of the GDP measure: first, economic activity is much less affected by hard - budget constraints than it is in most other economies; and second, bad debt is much less likely to be written down.
What I can prove, and have proved if you agree with my assumptions that Chinese economic activity is much less limited by hard - budget constraints than other economies and that debt is much less likely to be written down correctly, is that it is definitely not 6.9 percent.
Lewis, it seemed, didn't work hard at anything in life, other than his writing.
our sharpest minds would be schooled HARD by a supreme creator... not the other way around... an average joe off the street could write a better, more moral book than the Bible and utterly destroy the god of any of the holy books in a general knowledge debate with ease.
William Blake wrote of England's «dark satanic mills,» and Charles Dickens's novel Hard Times describes the prototypical industrial city of Coke - town in terms more hellish than heavenly.
It is so much easier to write someone off as «demon possessed» than to do the hard work of loving, healing, restoring, and mending that may need to be done with someone who suffers in such ways.
As he writes, «I am far harder on conservative Protestant Christians who share this heritage than I am on anyone else.»
Even though it feels like a drop in the ocean, Unpopular Culture (SPCK) was written for such a time as this — to help other young people trying to find their place in a world that is harder to understand than ever before.
Indeed, Gawande should read Gawande when he writes, «Assisted living is far harder than assisted death, but its possibilities are far greater.»
After all, Wesley notes, Genesis 2:18 says it is not good for man to be alone, the apostle Paul writes that it is better to be married than to burn with passion, and Jesus warned against religious leaders tying up «heavy burdens, hard to bear,» and laying them on people's shoulders (Matthew 11:30).
Ferré says, «No book has caused me more pain of authorship than this one... If harder writing makes for easier reading, without forfeit of content, the pain is worth while.»
Consider this... a person goes to college, gets a four year degree in archaeology (or some antiquities preservation analog); spends summers sifting through sand and rock and gravel, all the while taking graduate level classes... person eventually obtains the vaunted PhD in archaeology... then works his / her tail off seeking funding for an archeological excavation, with the payoff being more funding, and more opportunities to dig in the dirt... do you think professional archaeologists are looking hard for evidence of the Exodus on a speculative basis... not a chance... they know their PhD buys them nothing more than a job at Tel Aviv Walmart if they don't discover and publish... so they write grants for digs near established sites / communities, and stay employed sifting rock in culturally safe areas... not unless some shepard stumbles upon a rare find in an unexpected place do you get archeological interest and action in remote places... not at all surprising that the pottery and other evidence of the Exodus and other biblical events lie waiting to be discovered... doesn't mean not there... just not found yet...
You've done harder things than this, and you have no excuse not to complete the program as written.
Partially baked frozen breads after re-baking have a lower volume, denser structure and harder crumb than directly baked breads,» wrote researchers behind a study published in the International Journal of Food Science & Technology earlier this year.
The Indians, so scrappy, so beleaguered, so written off, and they're riding their elite arms harder than any team has ridden their elite arms since Old Hoss Radbourn was around.
I can only hope that this attempt is taken more seriously than the largely muted and clearly unsuccessful protests of late last season... although the plane writing escapade brought some much - needed attention to the matter, it failed to resonate with fence - sitters and those who had just recently fell off the Wenger truck... without a big enough showing of support the whole endeavor appeared relatively weak and poorly organized, especially to the major media outlets, whose involvement could have significantly changed what was to follow... but I get it, few wanted to turn on their club, let alone make a public display of their discord... problem is, they are preying on that vulnerability, in fact, their counting on you to keep your thoughts to yourself... who are you to tell these fat cats how to steal your money... they have worked long and hard to pull the wool over your eyes... they even went so far as to pay enormous sums of cash to your once beloved professor to be their corporate spokesmodel so that the whole thing would be more palatable... eventually the club made it appear as if this was simply a relatively small fringe group of highly radicalized supporters, which allowed the pro-Wenger element inside the club hierarchy to claim victory following the FA Cup win... unfortunately what has happened to this club can't be solved by FA Cups or a few players coming in, the very culture of this club needs to be changed and that starts at the top... in order to change the unhealthy and dysfunctional narrative that has absorbed this club we need to remove everyone who presently occupies a position of power... only then can we get back to the business of playing championship caliber football, which should always be the number one priority of this organization... on an important side note, one of the most devastating mistakes made in the final days of this hectic and poorly planned transfer window didn't have to do with the big name players like Sanchez or Lemar, but the fact that they failed to secure Jadon Sancho, who might even start for Dortmund this season... I think they might seriously regret this oversight... instead of spending so much time, energy and manpower pretending that they were desperately trying to make big moves, they once again lost the plot due to their all too familiar tunnel vision
Gordon wrote at a time when the brown trout, a fish much harder to catch than the native brook trout, had just been introduced to the U.S. from Europe, as had the dry fly (by the English).
Now it's never easy writing these posts after an Arsenal loss, but when that loss comes against Tottenham, it's harder than ever.
Musonda wrote on Instagram: «You sacrifice, you work hard, harder, you give more than what's expected.
Mirror writing is harder than
So glad that there are now more of us out there who can write about all the amazing positive experiences of family travel, to more places than Disney and all inclusives, and to let other parents know that although travel with kids can be hard, it is always worth it.
But as I read through all that advice, I could only think of a post I wrote back in 2014 in which I mused that «there are few jobs on this planet harder than managing a district's school food program.»
It's getting harder and harder to parody natural childbirth and homebirth advocates because there is virtually nothing I can write that is more absurd than how they actually behave.
The bottom line: whether you're approaching the teacher or the principal, a united front of several parents is much harder to ignore than the single parent who can be written off as some wacky «health nut.»
It's so much harder to write a book than people might think but I know it's inside of me somewhere!
And quite a few have written about how naming a second child (or third, or fourth...) is much harder than naming your first.
Becky Mansfield, a fellow mom of four who literally wrote the book on potty training, agrees that boys aren't necessarily «harder» to potty train than girls.
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