Sentences with phrase «kinds of questions readers»

Grasping the literary dimensions of these writings enables students to see what kinds of questions readers can expect such religious texts to answer, and which they can not answer.

Not exact matches

What is significant for Milosz's readers in this kind of writing is that he names in himself what is a fundamental religious question of our times; namely, getting past Job.
As noted in the introduction, I am also making another, different kind of assumption that readers will make use of these questions in whatever way seems most helpful.
The rest of this chapter will show briefly how historical study of the Bible proceeds and the kinds of questions it leads the Bible and its readers to ask one another.
When the reader asks this kind of question, he begins to see that in writing to the Galatians Paul rejected the ultimate adequacy of every form of religious achievement, not simply that of Judaism.
I suspect that many readers will find this kind of questioning either strange or inconsequential.
But readers familiar with the way politicians answer questions of this kind will see that he made a point of quite explicitly making it clear that he was not ruling it out.
Paul, in summation, and further to a response that one of your readers «Lindsay» was kind enough to give me to an earlier question, about you claiming that «B» vitamins are «growth promoting» (I have since stopped taking the B vitamins as a result) are there any other vitamins that you might also feel contribute to energy excess?
A question some of my readers ask me is how to find a Thai girlfriend or how to get sex in Thailand without At you will find the same kind of online dating system that you will find at other well known South African dating sites where you would
Today, Kriete takes time to answer a handful of questions from Education World and to give our readers a preview of the kinds of helpful tips that pack the pages of this new book!
Unlike a traditional story that ends in some kind of resolution, a case ends with unresolved questions for the reader to consider and apply to their own work.
States may try and avoid answering these kinds of questions, pointing to new tests, new measures, and new calculations, but some will have come up with estimates and projections they will share if asked (or FOIA'd), and it will be useful to readers to explain what information is and isn't available.
She's probably the key speaker on issues of metadata at publishing conferences and the kind of soul who doesn't mind a rather basic question from someone trying to learn more about this fundamental element of publishing in the digital age — the metadata by which a book is tracked by professionals and discovered in searches by potential readers.
We are likely to face those kinds of questions when we receive feedback, especially if our developmental editor or beta readers are good.
As they begin to fall for each other, the reader gets swept up in questions of fate and coincidence and explores two very different kinds of American experiences.
A good copyeditor will not only fix errors of style and mechanics, but will also ask the kinds of questions that you don't want your readers to have to ask — Isn't the Golden Gate Bridge red?
Make sure you hook readers in with some kind of interesting question or detail that will make them interested enough to want to buy the book.
It would be unwise to underestimate how well that kind of revelation can be understood, and questioned, by readers.
I'm always interested in your perspective on this, but you've gotten some legal questions here wrong, and in a way that I think kind of misleads your readers.
Although I haven't let her words deter me from writing what I love and feel most inspired to write, they have called into question the kind of fiction readers are craving these days.
And while Cornwell tries «to take the high road,» she says, and is graciously measured when speaking to the question of the UK publishing industry's relationship with Amazon, she does point out that there's a different kind of disruption at work — between author and reader — when booksellers decline to offer titles to their customers.
The blogger left the readers with these two questions: «Has anyone been successful using these kinds of services or any others?
In the «My kind of dog» quiz, O'Neil asks readers to answer a series of multiple choice questions about the behavior they expect from a dog.
The bulk of the questions were supplied by blog readers themselves, and they touch on a wide range of topics, including whether the game will feature new environments, new vehicles, and new platforming moves; if we can expect DLC; and what kind of experience we can expect from the newly announced co-op mode.
There are some readers and population campaigners who question this kind of presumption and wish we could avoid that kind of growth, for obvious reasons.
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