Throughout the tour, Mrs. Whitney's own
words bring the stories to life.
Not exact matches
By participation in a community with the internal
story of its own «recovery of sight» (recorded especially in the Scriptures and retold in Tradition) Christians are
brought into encounter with the promissory
words and events that have given them their
life and identity
to this day.
We never become inured
to the liberal and casual use of the N -
word, nor
to the disturbing images conjured up, and sometimes shown in flashback, as the assembled company recalls their
life stories that have
brought them
to this place at this time.
Armstrong's infamous «Oprah» appearance and public admission
brought poignancy
to his own
words: «We are the authors of our
life stories.»
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.
The design team's job is
to bring words on a page
to life —
to find clear and memorable ways
to tell the
stories described by the scripts.
Titles such as these are no longer limited
to words on a digital page, as the interactivity of the title means actual screenshot footage, voiceover narration from the actors in the movie, and the ability
to bring the
story to life through bonus features, a crucial step in the process of developing a reading fluency by drawing on prior knowledge and a high - interest subject
to the young reader.
(Lois P) Other readers were captivated by Benjamin's beautiful writing style, which
brings the
story to life: A sad, rich
story, told from Anne's point of view, beautifully written in
words both accessible and poetic (Judy B).
«Schickele narrates with infectious enthusiasm,» wrote one reviewer on Amazon, «
bringing life to the
words, sounding as if he's telling his favorite
story...»
Kusama's drawings both illustrate and interpret Andersen's
story,
bringing it
to terrifying
life, and Andersen's
words lend narrative content
to Kusama's landscapes of unblinking eyes, curling tendrils and disembodied profiles.