What kind of language do you use?
What kind of language should you be using?
To know the right keywords, just look at some job postings in your field, and see
what kind of language is used to describe key skills and job titles.
Setting boundaries around
what kind of language is acceptable and which topics are off - limits will help prospective candidates understand if they're a good fit for the environment and help current employees engage freely within those terms.
What kind of language can I include in my retainer agreement that will allow me to keep the full fee if the case does not go to trial (and arguably, at least some of the fee is «unearned»)?
One of the more nuanced areas of sexual harassment law is
what kind of language a male can direct towards a woman in the workplace.
Says Ariel Doron, co-founder of the company, «When you do yoga for many years, you start asking yourself what kind of foods you put in your mouth, how you treat other people,
what kind of language you use,» he says.
And Sam Messer was such a good teacher because he understood young people's concerns about what being an artist is, specifically those making paintings,
what kind of language of expression they should have, and so on.
How far have they explored a fetish, and
what kind of language do they like to use?
What's really important is not
what kind of language Ebonics isn't, but what kind it is.
When Kennedy described Percoco as «upset and direct with me,» prosecutor Matthew Podolsky asked «
what kind of language» Percoco used.
What kind of language are we using when we try to address God?
When people wonder what sorts of things they can and should pray about, and
what kind of language and words to use when communicating with God, it is often not enough to just tell them that they can have a conversation with God just like with any other person.
However, Mr. Zuckerberg insisted that the company does not discriminate against Republican employees and that its definition for
what kind of language should be kept off the platform was rooted in common sense.
Not exact matches
To get at that you'll need to use the right
kind of language, whether it's a guarantee, testimonials or some other tactic, to assure people you have
what they need.
Tell them
what they will gain from it, and use the
kind of language they will find familiar.
As we saw in the last chapter, popular poetry juxtaposes Christian
language with contemporary analogues and contrasts and does thereby achieve a
kind of ironic distance from that
language; but direct contact with traditional
language and symbols —
what Donne, Herbert, and Hopkins achieved — is not easy, if it is even possible in our time.
This morning, The Today Show's Savannah Guthrie asked DeVos about the remarks, saying, «I wonder, as the education secretary, who's in charge
of what our kids learn,
what do you think
of that
kind of language?»
To put it in the
language appropriate to MP, one undertakes the action
of reasonable thought to try to see
what action, including that
kind of action, is.
If, instead
of gospel,
what is proclaimed in the churches is nothing more than the
kinds of «musts» and «shoulds» and «ought to's» that one can hear from many other quarters — along with the ubiquitous
language of «rights» — then we can not expect church people to be any more receptive to such exhortations than are their counter parts in society at large.
As we look at the implications
of self - involving
language for Christian education, we need to deal with
what Evans calls preunderstanding, for performatives rely on some
kind of descriptive assertions about reality.
Once we have established the possibility
of talking about God we need to look at (A) how the rules
of logic apply to this use
of language, and (B)
what kind of verification is appropriate.
Embedded in the debate about
what register
of language and
what kind of words we might use in the Mass is a more fundamental, and vital, question: how valid is it to use any
kind of human
language to talk to, and about, God?
They ask me
what kind of Bible I'm using and I say «Greek, the
language in which the passage was written.
This is mostly due to the
languages they speak,
kind of food they eat,
kind of crops that grow there, how is the water availability,
what is the
kind of weather — hot, cold, etc. and other factors.
It will enable us to clarify our
language, to avoid contradiction, to stop talking sheer nonsense, to look for some
kind of referent which will give the necessary verification to
what we are saying as Christians.
Then he went on to outline the outrageous happenings at Augsburg, and to indulge in the
kind of language the delicate Melancthon so detested: «They thought that when they brought the Emperor in person to Germany, all would be frightened and say «Gracious Lords,
what is your wish?»
Vocabularies are exhausted and
languages altered in the attempt to praise him enough; death is looked on as gain if it attract his grateful notice; and the personal attitude
of being his devotee becomes
what one might almost call a new and exalted
kind of professional specialty within the tribe.
«Every family we've served as a
kind of impromptu therapist,» says Naoum, «giving the families people to talk to who speak their
language and know
what's going on.»
Recently, Reformed pastors like Mark Driscoll and John Piper have revived this
kind of language, Driscoll explaining that the Gospel begins with «God hates you, and it's going to go really really bad forever,» Piper concluding that natural disasters like the Asian tsunami and presumably the Haitian earthquake are acts
of judgment by a holy God on an unholy people, stern illustrations
of what we all deserve.
I've never understood
what kind of leadership could be given in a dead
language.
-- It is interesting to compare the multiplicity
of the tools in
language and
of the ways they arc used, the multiplicity
of the
kinds of word and sentence, with
what logicians hayc said ahont the structure
of language.
While
what you have here looks amazing, it would be great to see
language that more accurately represents your recipes, as this
kind of wording may be confusing for people who aren't as informed and don't realize they are actually consuming a good amount
of sugar when they eat this.
Personally, I find it rather ironic that you're lecturing the blog author on the rigor
of language, when, faced with the need to support the claims made by a documentary that has faced absolutely no real standards
of intellectual rigor or merit (the
kind of evidence you apparently find convincing), you have so far managed to produce a study with a sample size too small to conclude anything, a review paper that basically summarized well known connections between vaginal and amniotic flora and poor outcomes in labor and birth before attempting to rescue
what would have been just another OB review article with a few attention grabbing sentences about long term health implications, and a review article published in a trash journal.
You know, she wasn't looking down at her child, you know, we didn't have
kind of her body
language of kind of apology, apologizing for
what she was doing.
PS — I totally get
what Madge is saying but I would worry that any
kind of consequential
language in this realm could backfire — it really feels like a lack
of control / power thing to me (which is I guess sometimes the root
of bullying behavior) but consequences could make him feel both more powerful (he gets more attention from his request) AND more ashamed (about peeing etc.) I would re-inforce two things: 1) his own control / power over his own body (that means being totally ok with having an accident) AND 2) another person's right to privacy (he has no right to talk to another person about their own bathroom behavior)
By teaching active listening, simple introductions, how to read other people's body
language,
what kind of questions to ask and then how to excuse herself politely from a conversation, you are teaching your child a social skill that she can use for life.
What kind of talking to expect from your 2 - year - old and how you can help children develop their
language skills at this age.
Instead
of focusing on
what an individual politician says, we can assess millions
of speeches over hundreds
of years to show how political
language changes over time, or how a specific
kind of contentious issue develops.
But when we come to think about questions
of what kind of society we want, to
what extent broadly thinking do you think we should be relying on the
language of rights as a defence against these types
of abuse?
It is almost impossible to write the same letter in two
languages without having subtle differences with some semantic relevance and there are different schools
of thought among translators over
what kind of differences to minimize, and which not to worry about.
English does serve as a
kind of de facto lingua franca in a number
of international settings, but it is not, from
what I have read, taught universally in South America, many African countries, or in parts
of Asia, at least not at an early age for effective
language acquisition (and I am unaware
of any evidence that English is projected to take over in a reasonable period
of time on its own; I have read that in Southeast Asia, for example, emphasis may even be shifting to Chinese).
We think that Miller's «ordinary military equipment»
language must be read in tandem with
what comes after:» [O] rdinarily when called for [militia] service [able - bodied] men were expected to appear bearing arms supplied by themselves and
of the
kind in common use at the time.»
One
of those includes
language detailing
what kind of interaction is forbidden between a candidate campaign and a Super PAC.
Paladino says he never supported the context
of what Trump said, but reiterated that that
kind of language was commonly used when bragging about sexual prowess.
He has won the arguments already, people are highly sceptical about charging off to bomb children, and that is the
kind of language we need to use to show these people up for
what they are, Hilary Benn included.
And he published a lot
of volumes
of annotated poetry and trying to preserve a
kind of a sense
of the beauty, the fluid beauty
of the
language,
of the music
of language, and I think that even though it may not be [in vogue] these days, I think that Martin had a very strong sense
of what beauty was in
language, and he managed to convey it.
Michael Goldstein: First, I would just say as the manufacturer
of the sauna, I'm going to dance around with the
language a little bit in terms
of what kind of terms I use to describe how we work with cancer.
Some things people do when they are lying is avoid eye contact, their body
language contradicts
what they are saying (
kind of like someone saying «I'm fine» when they look upset), how they react to
what you're saying, they shift their stance often, they fidget, they cover parts
of their face with their hands (like they are trying to hide), they could sweat or even move away from you slowly.
Kind of like an entrepreneurial troll, Wade has learnt
what cocktail
of sexist concepts and deliberately antagonistic
language to use to get his sites attention.