Seeing new technologies that improve practice, equipment I have only
seen in text books, and learning practical skills that would change my personal patient management protocols was amazing.
Not exact matches
First, the best
book I've ever
seen as a first
text on investing is, unfortunately, no longer
in print.
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Among the
books he had us read were two that really challenged my thinking and helped me
see certain key
texts in a new light: They are The Epistle of James by Zane Hodges and The Reign of the Servant Kings by Joseph Dillow (a revised and updated edition of the
book is now titled Final Destiny).
Books like Holy Hilarity help us break out of the box of reading the Bible with straight faces, so that we can
see the truth
in the
text.
He not only provides detailed explanations of the
text all the way through (which providing lots of footnotes for those who want to research
in more depth), but he also provides theological asides that help the student of Scripture
see how the
book influences our life and thinking today.
I had a fascinating conversation with Max Stackhouse of Andover - Newton Seminary who felt that one of our greatest needs
in the subject area of this
book was for an examination of the history of preaching on certain
texts as the «Rich Young Ruler» to
see how sermons related to different contexts.
Rather than
seeing it as a
book of proof
texts, it helps us
see what God has been doing
in the world, and what our role might be
in carrying the story forward.
A postmodern approach to the New Testament witness to Jesus» resurrection, as it is developed by Marianne Sawicki
in her
book Seeing the Lord: Ressurrection and Early Christian Practices, [10] is more efficacious
in enabling access to the reality of resurrection than any analysis of the biblical
texts that is determined by a critical methodology founded on a Kantian epistemology.
Saw this
in my church last year when «a great prophet of God» came - a
text book case of this blind idiocy
in fact.
See R.H. Charles: Eschatology; Hebrew, Jewish and Christian, p. 261) Thus from clever juggling with figures and
texts came the literal significance of the famous Jewish - Christian millennium, which the
Book of Revelation includes
in its drama of the future.
The original German version of these essays, which are the
texts of various lectures given by the author (
see note at the end of the
book), has appeared
in the sixth volume of Schriften zur Theologie (1965).
It was a pioneering feat of simply outstanding quality, testimony for which is
seen in the fact that it served as the basic
text -
book of early human history for more than two and a half thousand years.
One morning, Daniel asked me what sines and cosines were, as he'd
seen something
in a magazine that used them - so I got out a GCSE maths
text book and gave him a half - hour explanation, which he seemed to understand, and then tried out with my help.
You really only
see purely capitalist or purely socialist economies
in text books.
Among those older
books, Heiberg realized, was Codex C. Armed with a magnifying lens, Heiberg painstakingly transcribed what he could read of the older
text, including parts of two treatises that no other eyes had
seen in modern times.
For the past 10 years, the Camera Culture group at MIT's Media Lab has been developing innovative imaging systems — from a camera that can
see around corners to one that can read
text in closed
books — by using «time of flight,» an approach that gauges distance by measuring the time it takes light projected into a scene to bounce back to a sensor.
And the besetting sin, you
see as an amateur coming from outside, it struck me almost immediately — because I've never taken psychology or read a psych
text book — and what I've noticed over my 20 - years holiday
in this discipline is the extent to which people who study IQ data and even other data about individual differences never concoct a sociological scenario that might explain the data.
Not what I read from just a
book or
in a research paper (though, trust me, I've read a few... all the way from
texts published
in 1896 to the latest research journals) but what I've had hammered into me through over two decades of unbroken dedication to weight training; what I've
seen other people go through and what I've learned from people who have gone before me.
Once
in a while, you'll
see story sequences that I can imagine would be much more entertaining if they had voices or cool effects but instead they play like short silent films as if you're reading a comic
book with no
text.
A combination of Tolkien's «Hobbit»
text and material from his «Rings» appendices, the script, which again
saw input from «Rings» film trilogy co-writers Fran Walsh and Phillippa Boyens, takes a great deal of liberties, bringing back familiar characters like Galadriel (Cate Blanchett), Elrond (Hugo Weaving) and Saruman (Christopher Lee), none of whom appear
in the «Hobbit»
book, and making ample, ominous mention of the «Necromancer,» who will evolve to become the dreaded Lord Sauron.
But if you look at the data
in Amazon
books, you will
see that the bestselling
books about the Common Core are «skills - centric» ones that claim to prepare teachers for the new language arts standards by advocating techniques for «close reading» and for mastering «
text complexity» as though such skills were the main ones for understanding a
text no matter how unfamiliar a student might be with the topic of the
text.
But there is something deeply powerful about hearing a classroom of your peers read life into a
text by reading it with passion and understanding and inflection and... Instead of thinking when you're reading silently, «I wonder if anyone cares about this
book,»
seeing that every other kid
in the class loves this
book, wants to bring it to life, enjoys it, is relishing the fiction and the words
in the story.
«We find that DreamBox is the most clear - cut way to learn, and teach these [math] concepts — children and teachers are
seeing them right
in DreamBox versus having to search
in the
text book,» she says.
The tendency to want to switch fonts, particularly
in fiction, seems to me to make a
book look pretty amateurish, and I've
seen self - published examples where the author used 2, 3 or more typefaces to indicate different kinds of
text.
To the extent that the iPad creates pretty portable pictures, I can
see how that might serve the aims of an art
book, but when it comes to
text I
see no inherent advantage
in the iPad over any other e-reading device.
One important note for those who require large - print
text: The biggest size is actually larger than the
text I
saw in a large - print
book I had on hand.
Other features include location, mapping, and contact information for each branch, a catalog search, an ISBN barcode scanning function that enables users to scan
books in retail environments to
see if titles are available at their library, an events schedule that enables registration, an «ask a librarian» live chat service, a contact information form, and even a
text - to - donate option.
It is possible to
see the foundations of the modern eBook from such activity, as the necessity for reflowable
text when reading on a Portable Digital Assistant (PDA) led to the formation of the Open eBook Publication Structure (a precursor to the EPUB format)
in 1999, and several portable devices such as the Game Boy Advance, PalmPilot and SoftBook had facilities for modems, allowing readers to receive
books without using a computer, often
seen as one of the core selling points of the original Kindle.
I've returned four Prime Reading
books that were graphically enhanced
in the past week because I could only
see 3/4 of the page, no matter what I did to
text size or orientation.
I can view the formatted
text in the preview window, as
in Calibre, or I can switch the main window to «
Book View» and edit the file
in WYSIWYG («what you
see is what you get») mode — I don't have to look at the HTML unless I want to.
In First Signs from DawnSignPress on the right you
see a board
book where
text is naturally large and easy to read.
We strongly recommend changing the margins yourself so you can
see how the
text will look
in your
book's final dimensions.
Today the
text has been updated
in the iTunes Store and you now
see «To view this
book, you must have an iOS device with iBooks 3.0 or later and iOS 5.1 or later, or a Mac with iBooks 1.0 or later and OS X 10.9 or later.»
I have always wanted to write math
text books because I
saw so many flaws
in text books that I had to use over the years.
The formatting of that particular title required the reader to zoom
in and then arrow over to every block, which would be like traditional comic
book or graphic novel readers needing to run a handheld magnifying glass over every page
in order to read the
text and
see the complete artwork.
No eye strain, reads like real paper Kindle uses actual ink particles and proprietary, hand - built fonts to create crisp
text similar to what you
see in a physical
book.
Kindle uses actual ink particles and proprietary, hand - built fonts to create crisp
text similar to what you
see in a physical
book.
When you compare the screens side by side, however, you can
see that the Voyage's screen is a little sharper — it's easy to spot
in book covers but is also noticeable
in text, particularly small
text — and the contrast is a little better, with blacks appearing more black than dark gray.
This has been an interesting
book - many layers for all characters - right now I am trying to go back and find a direct reference to the title - I remember
seeing it
in the
text.
While School Yourself does
see the place for its
texts in the widespread adoption of textbooks
in academic environments, currently the most common feedback comes from individual consumers who bought their hands - on
books series
in order to supplement their own school materials.
But I would be really curious to
see how both Kindle and new Sony reader (and event Nook Touch for that matter) handle a
text based pdf with graphics context mixed
in like formulas and diagrams — let's loook at a popular science
book or better yet a textbook (math, physics).
However, as services such as Createspace and KDP simplified print
book and eBook production to make it a possibility for thousands of self published authors — and as
text - to - speech automation continues to evolve — I don't think it will be long before we
see a breakthrough
in audio
book self publishing capabilities.
In the «real» world, lots of people buy books in part because of the marginalia, either out of a sense of nostalgia, or because seeing somebody else's highlights and notes — like, say, those of one of our founding fathers — can really illuminate a text with fresh perspectiv
In the «real» world, lots of people buy
books in part because of the marginalia, either out of a sense of nostalgia, or because seeing somebody else's highlights and notes — like, say, those of one of our founding fathers — can really illuminate a text with fresh perspectiv
in part because of the marginalia, either out of a sense of nostalgia, or because
seeing somebody else's highlights and notes — like, say, those of one of our founding fathers — can really illuminate a
text with fresh perspective.
Not only may the formatting of your
book have to change (
see below), but you need to bear
in mind that the end user can change the
text size and font on their e-reader.
To check this, type a nonsensical word
in the search bar and then if the «
Text in books» item is available tap on it to
see how many
books are being indexed.
Most of the general public would have
seen a
book — that Bible — only
in church, and all but the wealthy and learned would likely have to travel to get a look at one of the classic
texts such as Homer's Illiad.
For footnotes, I went to the
text where the footnote appeared
in the physical
book, went to the next paragraph return and then inserted it using square brackets (
see highlighted section
in the image below).
The button turns green and the
text in it changes to Buy
Book (if the book is free, you'll see a different button, but it works the same w
Book (if the
book is free, you'll see a different button, but it works the same w
book is free, you'll
see a different button, but it works the same way).
• Original pages / Flowing
text: while reading free classics (Call of the Wild, Wuthering Heights), enabling this function will allow readers to
see the
book's raw form
in prints.