Yet, I have
seen his words repeatedly turned on end.
Not exact matches
The
words «from now on» (26:64) convey the conviction «that the coming of the Son of Man on the clouds of heaven would be
seen not merely at the end of time but continuously or
repeatedly from the moment of Jesus» death.
Writing in Salon, Mary Elizabeth Williams, somewhat incorrectly, notes «you don't
see a whole lot of viral posts using the
word «hero»
repeatedly to describe mothers,» but later states:
A speech - language pathologist also can help if you
see tension in your child's jaw or cheeks, or if he looks away, clenches his fist from tension, blinks
repeatedly, grimaces, or stomps his feet in frustration trying to get the
words out.
I am very disappointed to
see comments that could possibly truly frighten other new moms, such as using the
word «cancer»
repeatedly, not cool.
Those who had
seen each negative
word only once were put in a bad mood and suffered from sustained effects, while those who had
seen the negative
words repeatedly did not suffer from the same after - effects.
Love those meaningful
words on the little ribbon banners,
words we all need to hear and
see repeatedly at Christmas and always!
Since Fraser Smith
repeatedly states in his book
words to the effect of «if you don't understand the manoeuvre, just
see your financial advisor, and he'll (or she'll) make it work», I can understand many folks trepidation.
We
see these
words listed
repeatedly in reference to what you can do to help shelter animals.
So, for example, even if a superior
repeatedly points out to the person that he should ditch the here - and - there
words and other forms of legalese (as The Lawyerist's Andy Mergendahl has advised here), or that nominalizations and buried verbs should be reworked into active voice, or that Enclosed please find (PDF) is silly and should be stricken from all correspondence, a month or two later the superior will
see these legal - writing foibles in a letter, memorandum, or, worse, a brief filed with a court.
It seems basic, but many candidates bore hiring authorities by using the same
wording repeatedly, or re-use what they've
seen elsewhere.
Determine keywords by reading job descriptions that interest you, and include the
words you
see repeatedly in your resume.