Sentences with phrase «with the vocabulary in»

This activity is based around the Cambridge English as a Second Language textbook and it's designed to help lower level students with vocabulary in 3 areas: technology, modern world, and data and information.
I have added the same powerpoint but with the vocabulary in English.
Students may feel frustrated with the vocabulary in the complex text called for by the Common Core.
Each set includes five texts representing rhyming and repetitive fiction, narrative and informational titles, a teacher toolkit with simple daily lesson plans and parent engagement picture cards with vocabulary in English and Spanish and an 18» x 24» big idea poster.
The device will come preinstalled with an offline dictionary app, Diodict 4, to help students with vocabulary in Korean and English.

Not exact matches

The startup world is full of its fair share of jargon, with buzzwords like «unicorn,» «disruption» and «innovation» becoming so commonplace in entrepreneurs» vocabulary that they nearly lose their meaning.
He triumphs at transforming cheap cuts of meat into something exquisite, expressed with an original culinary vocabulary (such as my brined, Brobdignagian turkey leg, confited in pork fat, roasted crisp, doused in agrodulce, and sprinkled with crispy lentils).
The room - filling IBM 701, fed with punch cards and armed with a vocabulary of 250 words, translated Russian text to English in a few seconds.
Income statements come with their own set of jargon, so it helps to familiarize yourself with their vocabulary before diving in on your own.
Zendesk has an excellent example with this headline, where they reveal their approachable vocabulary and throw in a vanilla punchline to get a quick laugh while avoiding rocking the boat:
Or are you (unintentionally) clouding your message with talk about technical features, design concepts, state - of - the - art technology, or any of the other buzzwords that all too often creep in to the vocabulary of B2B sales people?
It's not that I don't feel like I can, I can... but is that in the vocabulary of the one who I worship, if it's not then why would I as His Son want to take on what is not His, my Father's nature... The versions of the Bible I've read seem to think that words are powerful and speaking them is an action and can even change physics if used properly... Again, the scriptures speak for themselves and circumventing the topical study with christiany cliche come - backs doesn't answer or annul anything that the Word has to say on the matter.
Some dumb flucks in a desert region wrote a bunch of tall tales, and some English guy with a big vocabulary translated them for ships and grins, and you all spend every weekend clubbing with and herking off to this silly book.
Beginning with Friedrich Schleiermacher in a letter published in 1807, biblical textual critics and scholars examining the texts fail to find their vocabulary and literary style similar to Paul's unquestionably authentic letters, fail to fit the life situation of Paul in the epistles into Paul's reconstructed biography, and identify principles of the emerged Christian church rather than those of the apostolic generation.
You would have no way of knowing this, but words are one of my «things»... I have a higher than average vocabulary of English, with a minor in Latin and German... (Scrabble players be forewarned).
The virtue - signaling mother in that beauty shop notwithstanding, there's an intuitive understanding that we're dealing here with real psychological distress — «gender dysphoria,» in the technical vocabulary — and that this and similar problems ought not be political ping - pong balls, because lives are at stake.
You could probably even argue that this is a mindset that has given us the word church in our common vocabulary to begin with.
Another attempts to assimilate the Christian with the revolutionary vocabulary: «Revolution restores the relation of man to man; it is a transformation of life, a renewal, a regeneration, a new life» — in other words, the equivalent of conversion.
They took a word, with its accompanying ideas, which at first had possessed no ethical significance at all, and they made it one of the great words in the moral vocabulary of the race.
And so he reanimates the religious vocabulary of the past in order to live with something like wholeness in the present.
If you compared my writing from ten years ago with the writing I do today, I use different terminology, different approaches to proving my point, different vocabulary, and I even have different theological beliefs, supported by reading passages of Scripture in different ways, all to accomplish different goals in the minds and hearts of those who read.
One could argue that one of the fundamental problems which many religions seek to address (although each with a different vocabulary) is articulated in the following questions: What kind of Being could know birth and death, ecstasy and terror, in the same instant?
And in general, familiarity with multiple dialects, like a broader vocabulary, supports clear and beautiful communication.
In interpreting his biblical texts Bultmann made use of these ideas with a vigor which promises that his basic principles of interpretation may survive, still seem valid, when the misty vocabulary of Heidegger's early philosophy no longer seems compelling.
The irony here is that a classic Greek word with a relatively unspecified meaning becomes the most well - known Greek word in the Christian vocabulary
When we use such a vocabulary, we find ourselves thinking about the world in different ways — and sometimes, at least, we may find common ground with other Christians from whom we were divided when our only language was that of contemporary politics.
Whatever one's quibbles with the list, few would disagree that teaching students who would be at home with the vocabulary would be an unlikely pleasure in today's world.
It's possible — and I may defend this at some point — that he was using the philosophical vocabulary at hand to explain some of the same phenomena that Mr. Morton is attempting to solve, albeit in very different ways and with very different presuppositions.
Both Sartre and Merleau - Ponty build on Bergsonian along with Husserlian foundations and succeed in answering, to a significant degree the questions surrounding this first concern.77 The second aspect is the metaphysical issue of the concrete relation of the vital and the inert (or being and non-being, if you prefer a traditional vocabulary), including the role of consciousness treated as «a substance spread out through the universe,» to use Merleau - Ponty's description of Bergson.78 In the first aspect we ask what consciousness does and what it experiences or «knows» as a result, while in the second we ask about the relationship between what consciousness is (in relationship to everything else that is) and what that has to do with what it does.in answering, to a significant degree the questions surrounding this first concern.77 The second aspect is the metaphysical issue of the concrete relation of the vital and the inert (or being and non-being, if you prefer a traditional vocabulary), including the role of consciousness treated as «a substance spread out through the universe,» to use Merleau - Ponty's description of Bergson.78 In the first aspect we ask what consciousness does and what it experiences or «knows» as a result, while in the second we ask about the relationship between what consciousness is (in relationship to everything else that is) and what that has to do with what it does.In the first aspect we ask what consciousness does and what it experiences or «knows» as a result, while in the second we ask about the relationship between what consciousness is (in relationship to everything else that is) and what that has to do with what it does.in the second we ask about the relationship between what consciousness is (in relationship to everything else that is) and what that has to do with what it does.in relationship to everything else that is) and what that has to do with what it does.79
Implicit in references to deserving are the dual assumptions that to speak thus is to speak with the vocabulary of retributive justice, and that the principle of retribution, however much qualified by other relevant principles, is inherent in any notion of penalty or punishment.
In my own experience, I have found that a healthy mix of vocabulary and knowledge from the student world (slang, music, sports, etc), along with that of my more specialized disciplinary concerns, builds helpful bridges for learning.
However..., using in - group vocabulary with new definitions in order to build walls is normal for any business culture, to include churches.
The rapture has become an accepted part of the Christian vocabulary with the publication of the megaselling «Left Behind» novels and a heavily publicized prediction earlier this year by a Christian radio broadcaster that the rapture would occur in May.
Do the phrases «after two days» and «on the third day» have any such association in this passage from Hosea, where, to describe the hoped for restoration of Israel, they are used in conjunction with the three verbs, «restore to life», «raise to life», and «live» which form the basic vocabulary of resurrection?
But while the programs of the «Christ of culture» advocates are rich in the vocabulary of 19th century Christian evangelism, the images — and hence the real messages — resonate with The Technique, the gambits of modern television advertising.
In the public relations game plan of responding, with the whole world watching, to relentless activists possessed by an insatiable appetite for vengeance (a.k.a. closure), the bishops adopted the alien vocabulary of «zero tolerance» and «one strike,» a vocabulary in which there is no place for words such as conversion, repentance, soul, and redemptioIn the public relations game plan of responding, with the whole world watching, to relentless activists possessed by an insatiable appetite for vengeance (a.k.a. closure), the bishops adopted the alien vocabulary of «zero tolerance» and «one strike,» a vocabulary in which there is no place for words such as conversion, repentance, soul, and redemptioin which there is no place for words such as conversion, repentance, soul, and redemption.
Like the ethics of authenticity, the vocabulary of vocation also foregrounds the question of our deepest identities, forged finally in communion with others.
I can agree with Jeremy's original statement, «I believe that God did lead human authors to write the words of Scripture, though not in a way that would override their unique thought pattern, vocabulary, or idiom.»
We, too, need to empower the laity to view themselves as engaged in ministry and provide them with an adequate biblical and theological vocabulary to envision what this entails.
But there is a critical corrective to this misuse within the term «catholic» itself, and the secular meanings that I cited a moment ago capture, better than our tainted ecclesiastical vocabulary, the gist of that corrective: catholicus, with its Greek background in the idea of «complete wholeness» (kata holos), defies possession by only a part of the whole.
Throughout the course of modernity, the vocabulary of liberalism has been promiscuous in its couplings with strange doctrines.
1) Define nothingness 2) Using words not in common vernacular as often as you do has only one of two purposes: a) To attempt and confuse people into agreeing with you; b) Self - gratification in a perceived superiority in vocabulary.
This is great, an inteligent nut spoke something what he feels logical to his brain and somany nuts retaliating with all the words in their vocabulary.
I work regularly with some of these people and have not encountered vocabulary - landscaping such as «physically challenged» in place of «disabled.»
The problem with Aristotle from Luther's perspective was not that he believed in the eternity of the world and the mortality of the human soul (which he did), but that his philosophical vocabulary was ill - suited for theological use.
Like the Junior Classics — another icon of that bygone era, with introductions by Harvard's president, Charles W. Eliot, no less — St. Nicholas wanted most of all to instill the nation's moral vocabulary in the young.
Well, it's been one of those weeks for me, as I've been battling pinkeye... yes, pinkeye... for the last four days, along with a boatload of work related to book edits and blog posts for next week.So I spent a good part of yesterday in the exact same pose as you see above, only with swollen, crusty eyes, slightly better hair, and a more robust vocabulary from which to bemoan my oppression.
The universalist outlook of the sages, with their reverence for the Wisdom of God's creative, revealing and continuing providential activity in the world, furnishes Christians with the perfect vocabulary and categories to describe the new reality of Christ, the divine Mind of God.
Liberalism worked well in contexts where consensus already existed, where a rich moral vocabulary or vision of the good life was deeply embedded; but in a society with Berlin's negative conception of freedom at its center, there is no binding vision.
Whatever the internal inadequacies of that paper, the attempt there was apparently the first to spell out in full detail the logical structure of the ontological argument — an attempt similar to that of Jan Salamucha with respect to the ex motu argument of St. Thomas.11 Hartshorne has not built upon the basis of these attempts, both of which would have helped him to see how easily a mere verbal predicate like «M» can conceal the need for a full and careful delineation of vocabulary and for an explicit need for spelling out the postulates needed.
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