Sentences with phrase «piece i've read»

Before long, your piece reads something like this: All these horrible things are happening in your businesses and, as a result, you're not making any money.
One of the first pieces I read on the slope of the yield curve, which continues to influence my thinking to this day, was written in the 1980s by economists Arthur Laffer and Victor Canto.
This piece reads much more like an opinion piece on God's morality than an explanation of why God flooded the Earth.
Although we are reading more than ever today, the pieces we read are increasingly shorter.
Pin It Ingredients: 4 ounces (1/2 package) cream cheese, softened 2 teaspoons McCormick ® Cinnamon 1/2 cup sugar, divided 1/2 cup Coconut Milk 1 cup heavy cream 3/4 cup coarsely crushed shortbread cookies, divided 6 strawberries, chopped into small pieces Read... Continue Reading →
That is the best piece I read bout the Perise mess.
This game is already awesome in regular size, but make the pieces Read More...
An excellent piece I read about this ad by Maria Andrusiak Morland defined unethical marketing as this: «the outward product or message of an ad does not match the underlying rhetorical and persuasive techniques, analogies and metaphors that construct the presentation choices in the advertisement.»
«He'll make a hundred grand a year, (but) he'll still be able to work on my Senate payroll, and I'll be able to hire a couple more campaign workers on my Senate payroll,» the piece reads.
The piece your reading right here, right now, will take a look at the four best cutting steroids around and some background on each of them.
He's created Franken-Friend.com, giving fans the power to create their own monster by stitching together pieces Read More →
«Dr. Gardner's popularity beyond academia reflects managers» desire to understand what makes workers, peers, and bosses tick,» the Journal piece reads.
That reference resonated with the other piece I read this weekend — the wonderful report by my heroes at the National Education Policy Center, «Democracy Left Behind: How Recent Reforms Undermine Local School Governance and Democratic Action.»
The headlines for these pieces reads like a cheat - sheet of Michelle Rhee's talking points: anti-teachers and unions, anti-public school, pro-Teach for America and The New Teacher Project, pro-testing, pro-school choice, pro-charter schools.
The flat bottom makes it a bit cumbersome to manoeuvre and calls to mind a funny piece I read by James May, in which he questioned mankind's inexplicable desire to reinvent the wheel.
The problem was that I didn't see my journey reflected in the opinion pieces I read or in informal exchanges with other authors and so I felt compelled to voice my experience, which I then realised, was an opinion shared by a larger collective.
This piece reads like a ready - made screenplay.
Ms. Patchett's piece reads like an attempt to guilt victims into supporting their tormentors.
A Q&A piece I read online over the weekend is a case in point.
I read yesterday that iShares is introducing some low - cost ETFs (I couldn't locate the piece I read yesterday so I found something close to what I originally read) to compete with Vanguard.
The piece reads «YO» when seen from Manhattan and «OY» when viewed from Brooklyn.
Made mostly of clay, wire, bricolage, and lights, these maquette - like pieces read and reference as unusual types of puppets or Kachina dolls.
Barlet is known for taking rigorously systematic approaches to banal and every - day subject matter; this particular piece reads: «THE VISCERA ARE REALLY REALLY SCARY WHEN THEY COME POKING OUT OF THE WOUND LIKE THAT.
The text found on this piece reads, «THE VISCERA ARE REALLY REALLY SCARY WHEN THEY COME POKING OUT OF THE WOUND LIKE THAT.
Oddly enough, the piece reads as more honest than the Pinocchio's nose might suggest, in so far as its admission of fallacy amounts to truth.
We spoke with the artist behind the performance piece Read more
one piece reads, recalling the intentionally misspelled ramblings of Pettibon's cracked - out Twitter feed and summing up the aesthetic of this show.
There is also a number of significant photographic works including Gerard Byrne's view of the Gate Theatre's stage with Louis le Brocquy's famous set for Waiting for Godot; Amanda Coogan's still from her performance piece Reading Beethoven, 2004, and Willie Doherty's Grey Day 4, 2007, among others.
The two pieces read like freeze - frame moments in the evolution of an image, or the declaration that a definitive image is neither desired nor realistically possible.
The entire piece reads like a Pielke press release — it's a retread of his silly «nonskeptical heretics» shtick, about which I wrote here.
Anyone who seriously doubts that should give the National Review piece a read.
The full link to the article is: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/327/5965/510 The reference header of the piece reads:
The piece reads and looks like a conspiracy theory written the very year (1937) to which Rosen's piece and the magazine headline indicate the Constitution - in - Exile crowd would like to revisit.
Please give the piece a read!
«Never needs painting,» an old marketing piece reads.
Hung together, the pieces read as one cohesive unit.

Not exact matches

Instead of simply looking at photos or reading text, VR allows a viewer to experience a piece of journalism from the inside.
You can read the full piece, or skim through his tips below.
Both are worth the read, but what stood out to me most was this from the NY Times» piece...
And you want it to be memorable so that if they're not near their computer when they read your sales piece, they'll be able to remember it when they need it.
If you're unsure about what your goal for the book is, read this piece about the mistakes that authors make when framing the results they are looking for, and how to better frame.
The entire piece is worth a read.
Hamilton penned a piece titled «Dear White Venture Capitalists: If You're Reading This, It's (Almost!)
My biggest piece of advice to other young entrepreneurs is to read constantly on subjects that apply to your current strategies and problems.
Even after you publish the piece, read it again and fix small typos that have invariably sneaked past you.
Where, if you follow the right people, you won't have to remember to go to their site because their Tumblr blog will put that great piece you wanted to read right in front of you.
If that story sounds related enough to the reader's interests and goals, the motivation will be there to read the entire piece.
Which piece are you more likely to read?
Before the reader sits down to read the piece word for word, he'll likely flip through the piece and read the eye - catching subheads which, by themselves, will tell a story.
Q. Gary, what is the most critical piece of advice you might have for the authors who are reading this article?
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