Sentences with phrase «language experience in»

Patton navigates Stiefvater's gorgeous linguistic aerodynamics with ease, immersing listeners in a lush language experience in this atmospheric urban fantasy.
A well - known study by Hart and Risley1, professors at the University of Kansas, looked at the relationship between a baby's language experience in the home environment and language development.
To address the achievement gap, principals need to be aware of the importance of language experiences in early learning classrooms.
Due to the diversity of language experiences in the class, many students were not able to take on the «expert» role in either English or Spanish, but were really learners in both languages.

Not exact matches

At Egon Zehnder, we have learned in much of our work with many of the leading Chinese tech giants and startup unicorns what type of talent is likely to thrive in China, which prioritizes the more nuanced «soft» skills of adaptability, flexibility, and potential rather than simply the «hard» skills of language fluency and past work experiences.
«Adding modest changes to points for language, age, and work experience would help refine the grid to put weight where it counts in the labour market, and select applicants that are younger and have strong language proficiency,» the analysis said.
How your startup uses language to shape the customer experience says a lot about what it believes in.
«These changes will reflect the relative value Canadian employers place on foreign work experience, and redirect points to language and age factors, which are better indicators of success in the Canadian labour market.»
Anyone who aspires to play competitively in the retail space these days needs to be able to talk the language of omnichannel merchandising — the notion that the various manifestations of a company's online or mobile presence can be pressed into service to create a more engaging, or at least tolerable, in - store experience.
You can start by deleting or more actively monitoring users (if any) who engage in profane language so they don't create a negative experience for your other followers.
They may not directly apply the facts and figures they learned in school, but they still use the language and processes that came from their university experience.
But I was just amazed by how everyone, young and old wanted to be involved... and was so deeply enriched and touched by the experience and the laughter and the love I experienced from the people I met and how women would in particular open their hearts to me and tell me the stories of where they've come from, particularly because I have the language and was coming there as a woman and just how touched they were that I was there as a woman from England who's learned the language and who's an artist and running this project and come all the way to see them so they didn't feel forgotten I think that was pretty much what they felt... that their stories were being heard so they don't feel forgotten knowing the tents would be around the world.
Description: For someone with multilingual skills and legal experience, bilingual - legal - assistant jobs are often available as projects or temporary jobs in which you'll help an organization with a specific case or issue, reviewing legal documents using your language skills.
Several factors contribute in selecting the pilot destined to the Hog, including the flight experience, the achieved qualifications and currencies and, of course, the fluency with the English language (as no specific training is foreseen to improve with it before leaving for the U.S.).
Her background is in search and natural language processing technology and her operational experience spans product development roles from coding to product management at both startups and Fortune 500 companies like PayPal and Salesforce.
The AirPods do stuff like this with Siri, too, but in my experience, Google is just better at natural language processing.
Realistically, it is hard to imagine anyone being able to understand complex legal reasoning in both official languages - and, furthermore, to demonstrate convincingly that they had the ability to do so - unless they already had some experience using both English and French in a work environment.
Delivered in class at the TCS Bisson language facility in Gatineau, QC, the program will be led by Alexander Malaket, CITP, President, OPUS Advisory Services International Inc., and experienced FITTskills contributor.
There is no doubt that integrating other cultures, foreign languages and different ways of doing business into our economy is not easy, but companies should be seeking ways to harness newcomers» former business experience in real terms.
So while I agree with her that political life may help renew faith in human dignity and so make human rights believable, the politics of human rights is conducted through liberal language that is extremely partial, that leaves out at least half of the human experience.
BTW, speaking several languages, my experience is that swearing in another language is always easier because it doesn't really «feel» like swearing.
Nevertheless, postal workers who work in a safe environment have experienced so many fatalities due to job stress that «going postal» has crept into our language.
I realize this is intense language, but it seems only appropriate to address the violence women are experiencing in their daily lives.
If you believe that Christian doctrine is essentially an attempt to capture dimensions of human experience that defy precise expression in language because of personal and cultural limitations, then the truth about God, the human condition, salvation, and the like can never be adequately posited once and for all; on the contrary, the church must express ever and anew its experience of the divine as mediated through Jesus Christ.
If we take Father Schall's pointed jest and explore it in relation to Walker Percy's own long journey, we see the heart of Percy's concern, a concern central to his fascination with the mystery of sign, of language, in relation to the reality we experience either by a deportment through ordinate sentiment to reality or a deportment of sentimentality, that is, a manner divorced from reality.
We must first be open to the word, to the presence of language in dialogue, poetry, and experience.
In any case, I can step away from the complex and obscure maze of language and external phenomena to find simplicity, clarity, immediacy, and profundity in an inner intuition of my own experience as subjecIn any case, I can step away from the complex and obscure maze of language and external phenomena to find simplicity, clarity, immediacy, and profundity in an inner intuition of my own experience as subjecin an inner intuition of my own experience as subject.
If inclusive language and the ordained ministry of women can help change our image and experience of God to include the God who loves us like a mother holding her baby to her breast, that may be the Great Awakening in our time.
Indeed, in a given language there may be no single term with just the variety of senses characteristic of the English word «experience».
The goal of the Christian life is to be found in the experience of «perfect love,» and the eschatological hope is expressed in similar language.
The whole church needs help in avoiding the depersonalization of God as we seek to overcome the limitations imposed on our Christian experience by male - oriented language.
In Whitehead's language the question is whether an experience can include unmediated prehensions of noncontiguous events.
The Church as a body has centuries of experience of reading the Word, of immersing itself in the language of God.
Once God is regarded as an actual entity, the use of personalistic language follows naturally, for our basic clue to the nature of an actual entity is given in our own immediate human experience.
This is remarkably personalistic language, and it is interesting to note that it all occurs in the more philosophical part of the book rather than where he is surveying the evidence of religious experience.
Eliot, our latest great Christian poet, avoids Christian language for the most part, seeking, as in the Four Quartets, for another language as the objective correlative of his religious experience.
Such a child is also likely to experience serious problems of social and emotional adjustment, for he senses that in his language deficiency the very foundations for his participation in the life of relation — and hence for having any life worth living — are threatened.
In the theater, because of the unities of time, place, character and language, the theatergoer experiences a catharsis.
The traditional distrust of simple statement, and of language as applied to the religious vision, in the new theology ceases to be an inoperative or inconsistently employed formal concession, and becomes a systematic tracing of the relativity of concepts to each other and to experience as a whole.
While the Resurrection was a fact, attested to by those who experienced it in so far as it could be described in human language, it is not possible to say precisely what the nature of these experiences were.
Today we still speak of the cross only in the explicit language of the Church and religion; perhaps some pious old Christians may still use the expression for the experience of their own life.
The elaborate narratives of Matthew and Luke may be the result of legendary or literary development; but that Jesus could speak of his own inner experiences in figurative or perhaps visionary language is shown later by his exclamation when the disciples reported their success in casting out demons (Lk 10:18): «I saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven.»
To read in the original languages is sure to bring even more misunderstanding and misinterpretation, because to any of us, they are foreign to our language experience, but even more so, to the cultural context of the times in which any were written.
It is obvious that in dealing with subtle metaphysical questions, the «ordinary language,» which is based exclusively on the limited macro-scopic experience, is thoroughly inadequate.
But the reaction was intensified as another basic presupposition of membership was contradicted: the experience of church, rather than providing a way out of this world, was increasingly being set in the context and language of a very disturbing and complex «now.»
The author explores these elements and possible points of contact with elements in Christian tradition and experience, raising questions about religious language: reality, analogy and metaphor.
Second, is a belief in God as the proper referent of that religious experience and language meaningful and true?
Whitehead construes the various possible areas of research very broadly, listing physics, physiology, psychology, aesthetics, ethical beliefs, sociology, or in «languages conceived as storehouses of human experience» (PR 5/7).
I merely observe that most of us slip easily into a loose godlessness — however well hidden it is beneath religious language and the outward expressions of piety - unless we are kept in a state of spiritual tension by life's disconcerting experiences.
Although he does not speak specifically of prototaxic, parataxic, and syntaxic modes of experience, the same sequential patterns are reflected in his description of the first cycle of intellectual progress, which runs «from the achievement of perception to the acquirement of language, and from the acquirement of language to classified thought and keener perception» (AE 31).
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