We are
pointing this article toward men seeking women, because females are not as visual and respond to charm quite well.
Not exact matches
MediaPost reports:» Google said it will add a Fact Check tag to
articles it indexes that
points readers
toward articles validating or discrediting claims.
The
article is heavily biased
toward the AKB
point of view You have not fooled anyone not even your self I suspect.
So we're
pointing our readers
toward articles relevant to careers in science and other technical fields.
So, every Friday, we're
pointing our readers
toward articles that hold some relevance to careers in science and other technical fields.
To remedy that, every Friday we're
pointing readers
toward articles appearing in Science — the print magazine as well as the other Science - family publications (ScienceInsider, ScienceNow, Science Translational Medicine — Sci.
To remedy that, every Friday we're
pointing our readers
toward articles appearing in Science (the print magazine), online news, Science Translational Medicine (Sci.
So, every week, we're
pointing our readers
toward articles relevant to careers in science and other technical fields.
To remedy that, every Friday we're
pointing our readers
toward articles appearing in Science — the print magazine as well as ScienceInsider, Science Translational Medicine (Sci.
If the
article on your screen doesn't satisfy your needs, there's always the chance that it will
point you
toward one that will.
To remedy that, every Friday we're
pointing our readers
toward articles appearing in Science (the print magazine), online news, Science Translational Medicine (STM), and Science Signaling — that hold some relevance to careers in science and other technical fields.
In this
article, Science's Next Wave
points you
toward three Dutch initiatives which may help you to turn your scientific results into business.
Should I
point her
toward your anti-cancer diet
article or is the low thyroid, Hashimoto
articles more relevant?
Then again, this very
article is
pointed toward the user who can read it.
(With thanks to Jennifer Miskec and Chris McGee, whose
article «My Scars Tell a Story: Self - Mutilation in Young Adult Literature» in the Summer 2007 issue of Children's Literature Association Quarterly first
pointed me
toward this ambiguity.)
Let me spare you that headache and just
point you
toward Friedman's How Much Money We Made in Our First Week — not an
article I can recall seeing in anything from the Time - Life or Conde Nast families of periodicals.
Let this
article be a
point of departure
toward understanding mortgages for students.
One particular example of this is a recent
article pointing toward the California Bay Area's price gains over the last 18 months.
We're going to focus this
article on transferring
points toward free flights.
In an October, 1973,
article in Artforum, Douglas Davis stressed the need for «a proper understanding and use of content [in art]-- of symbols and meanings that
point outside
toward the world.»
A skeptic of global warming recently
pointed me
toward an
article by Richard S. Lindzen, the Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
It's a
point I touched on before in an
article about why fracking may never succeed in the UK, and Damian Carrington over at The Guardian appears to agree — suggesting that while gas company Cuadrilla will no doubt appeal, the political mood
toward fracking is souring.
A fascinating
article for Politico, titled «The Vegetable Technology Gap» by Helena Bottemiller Evich,
points out that, between 2008 and 2012, a mere 0.5 percent of USDA subsidies went
toward vegetable, fruit, and nut growers.
My suspicions would be that attitudes
toward the medical establishment and financial concerns are some factors, but probably the biggest one is just plain old embarrassment (as
pointed out in the
article).
While leaning
toward the
point of the
article, I must say I find the issue to be more about common sense than absolutes.