Sentences with phrase «kinds of readers in»

Not exact matches

What kinds of posts do your blog readers demonstrate the most interest in?
Whether knowingly or not, Chotiner's piece is a perfect example of the kind of attitude Spayd mentions in her column, where she notes that many journalists «have a reflexive aversion to interacting with readers
A 236 - page compendium of insightful commentary and sound advice for the entrepreneur and small business owner With real world practicality, readers will learn how to significantly reduce their marketing costs and while increasing their profit margins by employing environmentally sound and ethically founded policies and practices; convert their vendors, customers, and competitors into a kind of auxiliary sales resource; successfully persuading business acquaintances to become joint - venture partners; utilizing social media, traditional media, and their own imagination to reduce advertising costs while employing alternative marketing practices The distilled and effective wisdom of two of the most successful yet frugal entrepreneurs who have combined their many years of experience and expertise in a single volume that should be considered mandatory reading strongly recommended.
This data can also determine the kind of content that readers and viewers engage with, which in turn feeds into future programming strategies.
In this year's list of Social Media Marketing Influencers there are many people who demonstrate this kind of helpfulness and I am encouraging those influencers as well as our community of readers to nominate up and coming social media marketing leaders.
That kind of value is exactly what will continue to bring in readers over time.
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.
No sooner had I finished my piece for Faith magazine's last issue (in which, my readers may recall, I encouraged Polish Catholics to keep themselves at arms length from the secularised and indifferentist ethos of many English dioceses) than news emerged that one English bishop at least had done something to try to address the problem, and that he had in the process aroused the kind of secularist hostility which is, I strongly suspect, — certainly in this country — the only really reliable sign that the Catholic Church is being faithful to its vocation.
But for the reader the volume lacks a sense of flow or unity because with each essay one has to determine not only how the Jewish writers are thinking of Christians and how the Christian writer is understanding Jews but what kind of Jew and what kind of Christian are being brought together in this particular chapter.
Clawson does a fantastic job of reminding readers that Collins» world of occupation, oppression, excess, and poverty is not so far removed from our own, and that it is exactly the kind of world in which Jesus himself lived.
My typical readers have had some kind of religion in the past, although they may not consider themselves religious now.
I am aware that the reader will answer at once: «You have shown that violence is inevitable and necessary in undertakings of any kind; therefore violence is legitimate, it must be used.»
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.
«These readers are searching,» says Doubleday's Liepa, «for inspiration and assurance in their individual, personal, everyday lives» According to Patricia Schreck, they are seeking books of a «comforting or supporting nature, no doubt because of the times» East and west of the Hudson, books of this kind are enjoying vast sales.
Thus, there is a key subtext in Sigmund's book, a kind of subliminal message to be received by North American readers already caught up in celebrating perestroika: «Come now, liberation theologians, announce this day whom you shall serve, the revolution of old or the democracies that are growing in this bright new day.»
Terry Eagleton once satirized the kind of reader who tries to find ingenuity in every expression.
There are many different kinds of experiences we could appeal to and analyze in connection with this first line of criticism — let me assume that I have made my position clear enough for the reader to go on and work out the kind of analysis I would provide in each of these cases.
Yet there ought to be a clear distinction in our thinking between a critique of the effects of this genre, with its deceptive promises of liberation, and a more empathic inquiry into the writers and especially the readers of this literature, those searching for some kind of encouragement and relief that they have failed to find elsewhere.
Today Rachel Held Evans is kind to give away to one of my readers who wins the draw a free copy of her book Evolving in Monkey Town.
I hope you've had the opportunity to get a copy of your own, because this is a good book, the kind that stretches your thinking and will likely impact different readers in different ways.
Justin notes that Paul's rhetorical strategy here is to begin by talking about wicked people who had turned from God and gotten caught up in all kinds of sins, only to turn the argument on his readers by declaring, «Therefore you have no excuse, O man, every one of you who judges.
I find many of the times, the objection or concern many have for what tongues are comes from a misunderstanding of the purpose behind ONE of the diversities of tongues — there are at least four different kinds (diversities) of tongues mentioned in the Bible, (I've had readers of my book disagree with me and insist there's even more).
My case was one in which the author, editor and reader are all known entities (in fact, they all know each other personally); the reading takes place in the exact same cultural and social context as the writing and editing; and the reader is himself a really smart guy, Ivy - league Ph.D. and all, who had spent a decade training the editor to be a certain kind of editor, with specific tools unique to the specific publication's aims.
And, as much as Bakhtin may have taught us to admire Dostoevsky's «polyphonic poetics,» most judicious readers of Russian — like the great Prince D. S. Mirsky — have recognized in Tolstoy's art the kind of serene sublimity and fullness of vision that places it naturally and worthily in the company of Shakespeare's plays, Dante's Commedia, and the Homeric epics.
Like Derrida, Gadamer thought that reading a text involves entering into a kind of play between text and reader in which the text has an effect upon us and we an effect upon the text.
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.
As I've spoken with my readers, several of them have expressed interest in the sources you used while researching A New Kind of Christianity — some because they are skeptical about your scholarship, others because they liked what you said and want to learn more.
Shepard's insights help readers to understand the distaste in which deep ecologists hold those kinds of discourse.
Then, I think, this Gospel goes on to lead the reader beyond the point where one is concerned with the physical body of Christ; and in the story of Thomas it shows that faith is not to be established by sight; that you have got to look beyond any objective truth of the kind which might be established by visible, tangible, corporeal manifestations: to look beyond that to something different.
Those are the stories that will come to the surface and help us as Christian readers to kind of think through and put ourselves in that spot and say, «What does this mean for me?
In this session Fr Pacwa outlines the different kind of responses which an individual, both in the historical presence of our Lord and in the here and now of our lives, might make, provoking the reader to a greater generosity of mind and hearIn this session Fr Pacwa outlines the different kind of responses which an individual, both in the historical presence of our Lord and in the here and now of our lives, might make, provoking the reader to a greater generosity of mind and hearin the historical presence of our Lord and in the here and now of our lives, might make, provoking the reader to a greater generosity of mind and hearin the here and now of our lives, might make, provoking the reader to a greater generosity of mind and heart.
The difference in tone between the ending of part III and the beginning of part IV heightens the ambiguity as the reader is shunted from despair to a kind of bittersweet hope.
The Bible, therefore, is more interested in particular legislation than with theories of law; it is not content to exhort the reader to be kind and honest in general but is concerned to say specifically what kindness and honesty mean.
No one expects the kind of battle once fought between the Church and Galileo to be waged again, but serious readers find themselves in a dilemma as they put down the newspaper to pick up the Bible.
(This kind of comparison may infuriate many readers, or shortchange both texts, but it is the sole direct comparison in the whole anthology.)
The Yale philosopher Nicholas Wolterstorff provides a critical history of the nature and purpose of art in modernity and suggestions for a theory of art today that could admit both its fallenness and its potency to engender some kind of salvation, and a piece by Daniel Taylor describes the abandoned Irish monastery of Skellig Michael that might make some readers want to plan a pilgrimage to this holy and - to?
To many careful readers of Deuteronomy, the theological tone necessarily presupposes the preaching of the eighth - century prophets.4 The strong theological ethic enunciated in Deuteronomy has a kind of post-Amos, post-Isaiah appeal.
The «reader,» an office which was briefly and not altogether successfully revived, was an inferior kind of curate who was initially utilized to supplement the inadequate supply of properly beneficed clergy and was later employed in some parishes to read the service so that the preacher could conserve his energies for the sermon.
I'm really getting the hang of using to Taobao (basically Chinese Amazon) and I didn't know if any of my readers live in China or plan to live in China and would love to see what kinds of food products and household products I'm able to buy on - line as an expat living in China.
One of my readers recently made my chocolate almond bars in this same kind of tart pan and it looked sooo much better than my version and photos, lol!
I got a lovely email from a reader in the Philippines telling me about a kind of recipe contest for Ingredient Matcher, a new cooking app that is launching this fall.
-- Readers have tried adding all different kinds of delicious add ins — try for instance mint, peanut butter cups, cocoa nibs etc..
The amazing translator for the French edition of the book was kind enough to adapt the recipe using agar - agar for our French readers as well, since the aforementioned thickeners are not easily accessible in France.
SAILING: CAT AND SCOW Sirs: Carleton Mitchell's report on Yachting magazine's One of a Kind Regatta at Miami (The Cat Leads a Revolution, SI, March 9) leaves such a one - sided impression on the reader that in spirit of fair play I feel you owe your sporting public some additional factual material.
Now if you're a loyal reader, you may be saying, «Wow, that's an awesome collection of camps and clinics offerings, but it's kind of a big time of the year in high school sports.
And that last kind of party, Dear Reader, is where the recipes which follow will come in handy.
I though that as readers of my articles on MomsTEAM are likely to have an interest in this subject, as I'm sure every one of you has been affected by an overweight relative or friend who is dealing with cancer, heart attack, stroke, and / or diabetes, and want to keep your kids from having those kinds of health problems.
I've been criticized in the past for suggesting the only options for family travel lie in The Caribbean and Mexico — and while those destinations are easy ones for me and most of my readers, I kind of love how «easy» is relative for my readers in other parts of the world.
The kind people at Kodak and Focus Features have offered to provide a pair of tickets to a reader at Mommy Niri (in fact they are sweet enough to be sending a pair for my date night too).
Dr. Zachry is able to explain medical terminology in easy - to - understand language, and helps the reader make the important connection to the kinds of every day activities that are appropriate for infants.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z