Sentences with phrase «reread more»

It's great because it means you're getting paid, but depending on how you» reRead more
When teachers ask students to provide evidence from the text to support their opinions, students read and reread more closely.
I'm excited about reading / rereading more, and improving my own investing techniques or finding new overlooked approaches.

Not exact matches

It reduces stress, since it won't be in the back of their minds, and it is more efficient, since they won't have to reread or reevaluate the item in the future.
But upon rereading it with her daughter, Marge discovers that the book is more racist and offensive than she had remembered.
There's no shortage of tips and tricks out there to help you learn faster and recall more, but nearly all them focus on how to study — try spacing out study sessions a particular way, for instance, or test yourself rather than reread.
But rereading the posts they look more staged than I'd noticed.
The more I reread what you have posted, the more I get the feeling that you are right where I used to be just a few years ago.
In fact, rereading these theologians makes the basic questions all the more difficult.
Since rereading 1 Corinthians 15 during these days of quiet bereavement I have been more than usually sensitive to the New Testament image of death as sleep, to the several connotations and implications of words in the Bible that speak of sleeping and awakening, perishing and quickening, death and resurrection.
One wishes that present - day Bible students would take Josephus more seriously — and also that writers who discuss the relations of Judaism and Christianity, or «the Jewish question» as a social - historical problem, would read and reread that profoundly tragic history until its full meaning sinks deeply into their minds.
Reread the Psalms and you'll find more doubting and questioning God than you'll find praising God.
The whole movement back to a commitment to the church started to make more sense when I reread Erik Erikson's discussion of identity as being tied to the discovery of an ideology, a belief system, which gives one a transcendent fix on the meaning and purpose for existence.
I suggest you reread the New Testament and come to a clearer and more thorough understanding of Who our Savior truly IS.
I follow the more pedestrian and time - consuming practice of reading and rereading a relatively few anthologies of myths and tales best known in the West.
And as new generations have encountered more and more of the world and its complexities, each generation has had to reread the stories of the past — not rejecting them, but revising and expanding their meaning to accommodate the new.
With this kind of statement, amplified by the brief for Texas, it becomes even more illuminating to reread the dissents written in Roe and in the companion case of Doe v. Bolton, by William Rehnquist and Byron White.
Within the Scriptures themselves, both the Old and the New Testaments, we see ample evidence of new interpretations and rereading of the more ancient texts, recognition of different forms and styles, even a retelling of the same events in a different way.
Reread the article: the app is used as a study aid, it's no more part of religion than a piece of paper on which we write notes.
On rereading the story recently, I was more struck by the fact that they changed their minds.
I'm a huge Harry Potter fan myself, and recently reread the series and found myself more intrigued by the adult characters like Sirius and Lupin.
I also played around with Photoshop some more and reread parts of Lindsey's ebook, Tasty Food Photography.
Can't be bothered to argue, if you want answers, reread what I wrote more closely and without your filters on.
I was rereading a post I wrote at the start of 2008 — Living Green past and future — where I outlined the things I'd accomplished in 2007 toward living a greener lifestyle and then added more eco-friendly things I hoped to accomplish in 2008.
However, as I reread past blog posts and thought about it some more, the more I felt like I should write something if only to have it to look back on later and for posterity.
Following my own # 6, I reread Gavin's original article a few more times and find it very helpful in understanding what hasn't been included in models (methane release for example).
However, the book will become even more valuable as they reread it again in subsequent years when they encounter the inevitable hurdles that arise to block their path to success.»
Having reread your comment I'm still not sure whether you have a more compelling reason for disliking the review than, «Ooh, you used potty language, gross!»
The world of Narnia looks exactly as I had imagined it as a child and, more recently, when I reread C.S. Lewis» cycle of allegories again a few years ago, and that is perhaps the more substantial half of the battle in cinematically translating The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.
The spacing of practice has resulted in more long - term retention of material, and students now have a study practice that is much more effective than simple highlighting of notes or rereading their notes or textbook.
Rereading offers big benefits because it allows for a deeper emotional connection and more thoughtful reflection than the first reading, which is more focused on the plot or the primary argument.
Reread chapter X in your textbook,» you could make the same feedback more encouraging by saying something like, «There are still some errors here, but I can tell you're making progress in your understanding of this topic.
After the first reading, further questions or prompts can encourage the children to reread the text and show them how to read with a more specific or different purpose in mind.
When a learner goes over multiplication facts or rereads confusing parts of a book, the brain gets better at processing this information because, with such repetition, more neurons grow and connect to other neurons, and neurons get more efficient at sending one another signals.
Some teachers have the impression that close reading is no more than a series of rereadings with teacher interrogation.
But, we bet it made them feel a little better to know that they don't have to fake understanding when they read; the best readers question, reread, look for context clues, and more in order to better understand and move through the text.
Thanks for the information but I expect more from Autoline than just rereading a postal press release.
I guess I need to do some rereading and then answer this question more fully.
It's faster to read, and I have more control over the pace, and I can easily flip back to reread or flip ahead to see what is coming.
(And the only reason I decided to go ahead and get it was that I knew I'd want to reread at least sections of the story, more than once.)
Yes, I'm more likely to reread and treat physical books as «keeper» books, so like you, I'm willing to pay more.
Reread that last bit one more time: «Wall of a page you control.»
How many more times do you have to reread and restudy the darn thing?
My sandwich in one hand and my phone in the other, I reread Jesse's text a few more times before I forced myself to delete it.
On this reread, it just dragged on forever and half the menace and thrill I remembered were gone leaving a more cobwebbed and bare story than I remembered.
Looking forward to more rereading in this series.
Many authors will also say that they don't have a favorite book of their own because they love them all, but I've written and published more than 60 books, and I do have favorites, even though my answer may change depending on my mood or if I've just reread a certain title.
And I do apologize for not clarifying earlier, I reread your comment and wanted to make this more clear.
Thank goodness, after taking more time with my reading, slowing down and even rereading the Spanish dialogue to get the gist of the conversation, I fell in love.
But there are some books I no longer want to read, and more books that I've read and probably won't reread; all of those can go on to someone else.
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