The big one can spell and recognize and
mostly write her name!
Not exact matches
Weiner's showing (argh — the unintended double entendres are just beginning) is
mostly about
name recognition: I was in North Carolina last weekend, talking to people from Chattanooga, Austin, and Phoenix, and before I could finish the sentence «I
write about New York politics,» they'd blurt out, «Anthony Weiner!»
Nina and I are friends as well, even though I say her
name wrong, who has also
written some books about fat, but there's this national conversation where you have the old school low - fats,
mostly paid for by big grain sort of research out there, and you're refuting some of that using very strong academics, randomized controlled trials, and the things that everyone wants, but no one has paid for except for maybe big drug companies and things like that.
On her English and Dutch
written blog Red Reiding Hood (a pun with her last
name) you'll find
mostly her own outfits, but also other fashion and beauty related subjects.
I
named the page Hoagies» Gifted Education Page, because when I was first
writing the page, my husband and I thought we were persona - non-gratis with the school district our daughter was in,
mostly because she demanded to learn in school.
These are
mostly older titles; the books he's
written during the past decade or two are sometimes disappointingly derivative, with recycled ideas and even character
names.
Since spending the «70s and «80s alongside Andy Warhol, both at Interview and within the walls of the Factory, Bob Colacello has stuck
mostly to
writing — and done so under his birth
name, even though Warhol suggested he go by Bob Cola.
So sophisticated was Obama's microtargeting operation — based
mostly in Chicago — that Sasha Issenberg could
write in the MIT Technology Review that the campaign already knew the
names of most of the people who had voted for Obama in 2008.
So you are interested in
writing this address and specific keywords (such as «Phoenix», or «19453») in the place noticeable for these scanners:
mostly in the beginning of the resume after your
name.