Sentences with phrase «using picture wording»

Definitely great advice to write using picture wording rather than the a-typical dry details however it is unreasonable to expect such a wordy ad.

Not exact matches

«A very high bar is set by using the word «Favorite,»» he wrote in a blog post that suggested several changes to Twitter's interface — including pictures and videos that are double - clickable to heart (à la Instagram), receipts when Tweets have been read, and a «Thank you bomb» feature that enables users with lots of followers to send mass gratitude notifications all at once.
«This might explain the awkward mistranslation of the French President describing Malcolm Turnbull's wife as delicious,» McKinnell said, attaching a picture of the Google translation for the French word, «délicieux,» which can be interpreted as «delightful» or «lovely» — as well as «delicious,» though it is unlikely Macron meant it in the way that term is traditionally used in English.
«If a picture's worth a thousand words, it's worth 10,000 on the small screen,» says says Paul Stannard, CEO at SmartDraw.com, developer of a business graphics software program that's used for creating PowerPoint presentations.
And he used his words and all manner of audio technique to paint pictures with his songs.
Without using the words, «called by God,» this trilogy vividly paints the picture of what calling is.
Typically articles that deal with polygamy or the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter - day Saints use loaded words to paint a negative picture.
So, as it turns out, much of what I end up doing is using metaphors, analogies, word pictures — like comparing «epistemology» (who even knows what that is besides philosophers?)
All the word pictures Paul is using here very much, draws from the imagery of the garden.
But God uses not only words, pictures and images, but Jesus, the Word become flesh and dwelling among us.
Another problem in understanding how the word â $ œapostleâ $ is used in the Bible is the medieval pictures we have in our minds of the twelve disciples of Jesus with halos around their heads.
First, he will refer to the total picture of Jesus which the biblical record presents; in other words, he will use the specific act or teaching in context.
We use the word creation to apply to everything from the making of a Dior dress to painting an abstract picture to the birth of a dog.
The use of a few words suggesting the main lines of a picture permits the hearers to fill in the details and complete the image.
How is it possible that our church social room should be filed with pictures that are mostly Kitsch — to use that eloquent German word — when centuries of artists have taken religious symbols and given them eloquent expression?
Men use the word «God» continually, but what varied pictures of him and ideas about him are in their minds!
I've heard several Muslims use the words Jesus Christ as an expletive, all while people are murdered and harassed for drawing cartoon pictures of Mohammed or writing unflattering articles about Islam.
These are only some among the many pictures which Christians were already using in the first century to express their belief that God encountered men through the acts and words of Jesus; that in the end it was not merely possible but necessary to say that Jesus is God, not only that he is the image or mirror of God; and that Christians may and should pray to God through him (which means, to pray to God as made known in Jesus) and even pray to Jesus as God.
To be sure, God is before, behind, above the law - abiding natural procedures which our science tries to understand, but when you wish to express that truth, don't use the word «supernatural» — that brings back the old picture of a split universe; use the word «transcendent.»
When Gutenberg was a young man, someone in Western Europe invented block printing (already used for centuries in China), in which «printers» carved outlines of words or pictures on a block of wood and then inked them for the «press.»
No one pictures the exact same thing even when you use a word like «dog.»
Today, the GIF is the Internet's universal language, serving as the «thousand words» that pictures are so famously supposed to be capable of being, used to express shock, joy or frustration when mere words just won't do.
For example, for the frequently used word «events» (used in describing natural phenomena in space - time coordinate systems) he substituted the term «actual occasions,» which for him gave a more accurate (and richer) picture of «real» or «concrete» happenings in the natural world.11 In this regard, he avoided the use of such commonly employed metaphysical terms such as «sensation» and «perception» — derived from seventeenth and eighteenth philosophers such as Locke, Berkeley, Hume and Kant — since for him they had a narrow psychological rather than appropriate epistemological meanings.
Yet, the «instinct,» if we want to use that word, is of a higher order than mere cravings, which Gopnik glosses over when he compares the impetus to read to our need for clothing and shelter: «there really are no whys to such things, anymore than there are to why we wear clothes or paint good pictures or live in more than hovels and huts or send flowers to our beloved on their birthday.»
Had they omitted «purge,» however, readers would nevertheless have encountered words like «enraged,» «dissecting,» and «hunting,» as the AP's Rachel Zoll painted a harrowing picture of the conservative Catholic blogosphere, using broad strokes.
Is this the moment where I should use the phrase «A picture says more than a thousand words»?
When I went back to look for it, I found that this blog used your picture and your words: http://pinterest-my.blogspot.com/search/label/Apple%20nachos.
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I love it that you use pictures to share the recipe before you use words.
For someone to copy it word by word and even use pictures, and take credit for it, is just wrong.
A picture is worth a thousand words... And since I'll be using a lot of pictures today, I think I'll go easy on the words, if you don't mind.
I don't know if anybody has ever used the word «relentless» to describe him as a player, but if you looked up the word in the dictionary, it might well have his picture beside it.
Srivaddhanaprabha has taken the unexpected move of using his Instagram account by posting a picture of Mahrez and Schlupp with the words «Both not for sale».
But apart from the window slamming shut we get all the final day drama with all the usual jargon, last minute dramatic swoops, pictures of helicopters that may or may not contain David Luiz, phones buzzing, alleged sightings at motorway service stations or petrol stations anywhere, Ronaldo or Messi shopping at the Westfield shopping centre, Valencia in the back of a cab in Swansea or Liverpool (or putting his feet up in Ecuador), everyone with their sources, players spotted at training grounds, Jack Wilshere driving his car to Bournemouth, last minute intervention by Daniel Levy who suddenly decides he wants Sissoko, and descriptions of transfers or done deals or rumours using words like amazing, dramatic, sensational, shocking, exciting, impressive or incredible.
I'm nervous to use words to describe the view as I feel I will not do it justice but hopefully these pictures scream zen or whisper calm to you.
So have your children use this coloring page to write their five happiest words and draw a picture to go with each.
If your child doesn't read yet, use taped or glued - on pictures instead of words.
In order to enter, people will need to download 2 pictures and a 75 - word essay on why their kitchen could use a little love.
Imagine what you do when you go shopping - picking up an item, turning it over, examining it from different angle — pictures tell a thousand words so use all 5 spaces!
From 12 to 36 months, toddlers typically go from using a handful of words to connecting pictures and objects with words to speaking in complete sentences and communicating more complex thoughts and ideas.
Picture books for younger children have been used for centuries to interest children in the written word.
Second, Lori suggested using visual tools for coalition building; pictures really are worth a thousand words and Lori knows it; telling versus showing is a great lesson that I took away from Lori's presentation.
Visual Recipe for Chocolate Chip Cookies inspired by If You Give a Mouse a Cookie — This recipe uses pictures instead of words for the ingredient list and directions.
Have your child find pictures, repeat words or use her toy bunny to imitate the actions.
It's an area dedicated for me to put my vision together using pictures, words, stickers... etc..
But those words he uses, along with his profile picture, are able to be viewed by anyone.
Lavish attention on your child when they use «I'm mad» to express frustration and read books and look at pictures of faces that express sadness, anger and frustration and give your child appropriate words to express these feelings.
They may not have every word correct, but using their memory, as well as the pictures on the page, is a great pre-reading skill.
Use pictures or words, depending on the ages of your children.
In those unique instances, the word picture of a male made independent by unnatural circumstances is conveyed by the use of the word na'ar.
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