Occasional remarks are found such as «before there reigned any king over the children of Israel» (Genesis 36:31), which seem to imply that from the standpoint of the writer the monarchy had already been established; and «the Canaanite was then in the land» (Genesis 12:6, 13:7), which implied that it was being written after Hebrew occupation; and finally repeated instances
of the use of the phrase «on the other side of the Jordan,» in reference to events occurring in the lifetime of Moses, which led scholars to doubt if Moses could have been the author at least of the whole of the Pentateuch.
The Food and drug administration is also operating to tighten regulation
of the use of the phrase «Gluten totally free» Gluten is a protein in grains such as wheat, rye and barley.
The vast majority
of uses of the phrase is as a strawman critique against mainstream science.
I decided to mine the «literature» on the history
of uses of the phrase «scientific consensus.»
One of the first instances
of the uses of the phrase appears in the July 1, 1979 issue of The Washington Post on the safety of the artificial sweetener saccharin.
Semantics and the lack
of the use of the phrase «concurrent group therapy» as its own separate modality may be one reason why initial search results were so lacking in the number of studies found.
Not exact matches
Forward - looking statements generally can be identified by the
use of forward - looking terminology such as «aim,» «anticipate,» «believe,» «could,» «continue,» «estimate,» «expect,» «goal,» «forecast,» «intend,» «may,» «might,» «objective,» «outlook,» «plan,» «predict,» «project,» «should,» «target,» «will,» «would,» and other similar words, or
phrases, or the negative thereof, unless the context requires otherwise.
Text Expander can create shorthand versions
of your most commonly
used words and
phrases.
The Oxford Dictionary defines the word as «nonsense,» to be
used in a
phrase like: «I think that's a right load
of old codswallop.»
Often, but not always, forward - looking statements can be identified by the
use of words and
phrases such as «plans,» «expects,» «is expected,» «budget,» «scheduled,» «estimates,» «forecasts,» «intends,» «anticipates,» or «believes» or variations (including negative variations)
of such words and
phrases, or state that certain actions, events or results «may,» «could,» «would,» «might» or «will» be taken, occur or be achieved.
In the context
of search engine optimization keyword density can be
used as a factor in determining whether a web page is relevant to a specified keyword or keyword
phrase.»
Basically - on a given page, what percentage
of all the text is
used by a specific keyword
phrase?
The
phrase was
used by a former Shell CEO to describe the company's experimental strategy in an earlier round
of investments in renewable energy.
This means avoiding
use of unnecessary
phrases and expressions that may distract the reader.
Indeed, you might
use the same
phrasing to describe Amazon itself, which blithely went through the first 23 quarters
of its existence operating free from a profit - making imperative.
Use phrases like, «Because
of x, y, z, I believe these changes need to take place.»
Analysts said that Kuroda and Iwata joining the Bank
of Japan would mark an important step in «Abenomics» — the
phrase now
used widely to describe the economic policies
of Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
And since it was clear that people were far more interested in «news you can
use» than a clever turn
of phrase, whenever there was a choice during the rewrite, sounding like USA Today trumped The New Yorker every time.
Wrote the learned judge: «The potential for the
use of phrases such as «this is a horse
of a different colour»... jump out at one.
He suggests
using powerful single words, short
phrases or clear and concise single sentences per slide, versus cramming slides full
of trailing bullet points and long - winded paragraphs.
Anheuser - Busch is opposing the
use of the
phrase, the Associated Press reported.
In a nutshell, you're restricting the
use of a highly specific keyword
phrase from general ads, even if this
phrase is relevant.
During the late»90s, Silicon Valley venture capitalists and New York City investment bankers
used phrases such as «monetizing eyeballs,» «stickiness,» and «B2C» to justify the ridiculous valuations
of internet companies.
Brainstorming the various terms and
phrases people might
use to describe a product like yours will increase your chances
of finding a hit in your search, should one exist.
You may apply for registration
of a trademark or service mark, word,
phrase or image after you
use the mark to identify a product sold or service performed «in commerce,» which means that you've
used it for advertising and / or sale to customers.
To reduce the number
of replies you're forced to type out hastily on your phone,
use pre-saved «canned responses» to generate generic
phrases and answers to frequently - asked questions in a couple
of taps.
OK, I've never seen anyone leave out SAP who worked in SAP, but I've seen plenty
of people try to make their work seem fancier or more important by
using convoluted
phrases to describe what they did.
This word is a shortened version
of what's up — like many Millennials terms, it came into
use as a way to shorten an existing
phrase for texting.
The useful post aims to help those
of us who weren't born with a Steve Jobs - style ruthless streak learn to say no without feeling like complete jerks or damaging relationships and offers specific tactics and
phrasing to
use, including:
«And so just to be clear on his
use of that
phrase,» he added, «and I think the way it's being done by all accounts is being done with very much a high degree
of precision, and in a flawless manner.»
The publisher says it's been
using the
phrase for more than 30 years to brand special editions, such as «Best
of Phoenix.»
The conflict: The Village Voice publisher is suing Yelp over what it claims is unauthorized
use of the
phrase «best
of.»
When
used in investor presentations, press releases, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings, and in oral statements made by or with the approval
of one
of Humana's executive officers, the words or
phrases like «expects,» «believes,» «anticipates,» «intends,» «likely will result,» «estimates,» «projects» or variations
of such words and similar expressions are intended to identify such forward - looking statements.
Big data, another buzz
phrase that has popped up recently, has always been in
use to drive various types
of marketing and sales campaigns.
«It's a translation
of the Latin
phrase petitio principii, and it's
used to mean that someone has made a conclusion based on a premise that lacks support,» writes Grammar Girl, who explains the complicated subject well in her blog.
It's tricky even for translators to get colloquialisms correct and when you consider the slang typically
used in the context
of various sporting events,
phrases translated out
of context will be nearly impossible to get right.
The system
used to generate the fake comments swapped out words in such
phrases again and again — for instance, switching «people like me» for «individual citizens» and «products» for «services» — to produce 1.3 million superficially distinct variations on the same basic block
of text.
But thankfully, Percival is happy to play translator, offering a list
of common
phrases used by VCs as well as what they really mean.
Every aspect
of the survey can affect the outcome, including the
phrasing used to pose the question, the order the questions appear on the survey and the options for how to answer, such as whether respondents are asked a yes - or - no question, or to rate their response along a scale.
That's the
phrase used to describe a board made up
of directors who have overlapping relationships with each other aside from serving on the same board.
The watershed moment for Spencer and his National Policy Institute came just after the 2016 election that elevated Trump to the presidency — in a video from The Atlantic that was viewed by millions
of people, Spencer was seen delivering a speech at an NPI conference in Washington, DC where he
used Nazi salutes, imagery, and
phrases to celebrate Trump's victory as a victory for his cause.
While I was listening to everyone and being proud
of the little 100,000 person town I call home, I thought
of a new
phrase that I hadn't
used before: «entrepreneurial density.»
As Amichai Shulman, CTO
of Imperva,
phrased it, any organization «that
uses computers and hires people.»
Even if you don't shorten «kind
of» and «sort
of,» Steven Kurutz
of The New York Times argues that these
phrases have «become a verbal tic, a filler
phrase» that we
use whenever we're unsure.
The land
of engineering: The
phrase «German engineering» has become synonymous with quality cars, but now the term is
used more broadly, as people head to the country for a chance to win a key apprenticeship.
Oxford University Press teamed up with SwiftKey, the company behind SwiftKey Keyboard, an app that works to predict your favored words, turns
of phrase and yes, emojis, and found that the «Face with Tears
of Joy» was the most frequently
used emoji in 2015, with the expressive icon making up 17 percent
of all emojis
used in the U.S., and 20 percent
of emojis in the U.K.
When you start to type into the search bar on Google, it gives you suggestions
of popular words or
phrases that people
use in a search.
A stock
phrase used by virtually all presidents since Harry Truman, the US as «indispensable leader»
of the free world, is largely missing from Mr. Trump's new NSS.
Now, if you happen to be the owner
of an ice cream business and you overhear your customers and employees mutter the same
phrase when they taste your ice cream I have some advice for you too: don't even think about
using that expression as the name for your store.
Even Richmond and Todd point this out on their website, writing that the company's name is just a «popular
phrase that people
use as an expression
of enjoyment, surprise or disbelief.»