Not exact matches
It's a big book — bigger in
size than your
normal paperback, and over 300
pages.
Such language may be used in connection with editorial extras (special issues, inserts, onserts and contests) as long as the editorial content does not endorse the sponsor's products and any
page announcing the sponsorship is clearly an ad or is labeled «Advertisement» or «Promotion» in a type
size as prominent as the magazine's
normal body type.
Assuming it was typed out in a
normal font and
size that's about 27
pages (275 words a
page).
By themselves, your
normal infographics don't address these needs — they are just static
pages presenting quick bite -
sized chunks of information.Luckily you can create opportunities to add these elements by opening up your infographics — here you can give your students the opportunity to dig - in and play with your information.
• The solution to the puzzle —
Page 3 • The
normal size puzzle — Pages 4 — 6 • The large
size puzzle — Pages 7 — 12 • The extra-large
size puzzle — Pages 13 - 30 • Questions and Answers in a table format for easy grading or you can cut these out to play a matching game — Pages 31 — 33 My students love doing these types of puzzles.
A «
page,» according to the KENP algorithm, seems to be somewhat shorter than a
normal paperback
page: my novel City of Sand is 255
pages long in paperback, using a 6 x 9 trim with standard margins and font
size.
Instead of either only seeing one - half of the spread or reducing each
page to half of its
normal size, dual -
page spreads can be seen in full gory — I mean glory.
Although, if an affordable reader came out that could read
normal PDFs, text files (ie, Project Gutenberg stuff), and web
pages, with a reasonably -
sized screen, then I would be interested.
Let's look at an example: (I've included these
pages at a larger than
normal size so you can have the actual experience of reading them.)
The next
page will appear at it's
normal size and you can then zoom in again if desired.
The iPad version is easier to use than the iPhone ap, the screen is much more like a «
normal»
page size, and its much easier on the eyes.
[button color =» red»
size =»
normal» alignment =» center» title =» Contact
Page for Awesome Places» rel =» follow» openin =» newwindow» url =» https://thisawesomeplaces.com/contact/»] CONTACT US [/ button]
«
Normal» will display the
page with no changes, «Just - Fit» will attempt to shrink some elements to make the whole
page fit on the screen and preserve layout (although this makes some
pages extremely difficult to read), and «Smart - Fit» will display content in the order it appears in the HTML, and with no
size adjustments; instead it will drop an element down below the preceding element if it starts to go off the screen.
A one
page letter, roughly 300 words, is considered the
normal size.