Word of the sentences came from an Iranian - based group called the Committee of Human Rights Defenders, according to Diane Ala'i, another Baha'i U.N representative.
Another idea in the thought of the divine image which we ought not to miss is suggested in the last
words of the sentences quoted above.
At once, with the last
word of this sentence, it was as if a light of relief from all anxiety flooded into my heart.
Margaret, can you please reread the first eight
words of your sentence above, and tell me what it means?
As you read, point out that the last
words of the sentences rhyme, meaning that they sound alike.
«A few years after our paper, we got labeled a syndrome,» he says, emphasizing the last
word of his sentence with slight disdain.
He capitalized the first
word of the sentence, ended it with a period, spelled each word correctly, and remembered the punctuation for the contraction.
Developmental Editor Person who deals with the overall organization of a book's manuscript rather than with changes such as
wording of sentences within paragraphs.
However,
the wording of the sentence: «the point of conducting science is to give an early warning, rather than just wait until the facts are obvious to everyone» is the weakest part of the entire argument.
When you pair a Bluetooth keyboard with your iOS device, the Bluetooth keyboard, by default, inherits all the features of the on - screen keyboard, including the language, automatic text correction, automatic capitalization of the first
word of a sentence, and double tapping the space bar will insert a period.
No one can say that the OneNote team doesn't pay attention to details, as it was also pointed out that there's a new setting for whether or not to capitalize the first
word of a sentence.
A reader who is skimming a resume will likely only be reading the first few
words of each sentence, bullet, etc..
When she's nervous, she echoes the last
words of your sentence to show she's following you.
Not exact matches
The open network set - up
of NMT technology allows for «soft alignment,» which means the system can search for the context
of phrases and
sentences instead
of translating
word by
word.
In September, Google researchers announced their version for this technology, which translates entire
sentences instead
of just single
words, providing a more authentic and relevant translation.
Programmers have, rather, fed the computer a learning algorithm, exposed it to terabytes
of data — hundreds
of thousands
of images or years» worth
of speech samples — to train it, and have then allowed the computer to figure out for itself how to recognize the desired objects,
words, or
sentences.
As a matter
of fact, there is no point in denying that by all means clichés surely increase the number
of words in the text, which is clearly seen in this
sentence.
What came out
of that night is a few
sentences I write,
word for
word, in every notebook I've purchased since then.
He suggests using powerful single
words, short phrases or clear and concise single
sentences per slide, versus cramming slides full
of trailing bullet points and long - winded paragraphs.
They analyzed 20,858 transcribed B2B sales call recordings against a sales - specific dictionary, ranking every
word,
sentence, and overall conversation with one
of the following «sentiment scores» ranging from Very Negative at minus - two up to Very Positive at plus - two.
That's a lot
of negative
words for one
sentence.
Horton suggests planting a set
of words into a
sentence, without giving your «opponent» a sense
of being told what to do.
A grease - stained work shirt or apron covered in pizza sauce is a far better indicator
of success than being able to use 14 different variations
of the
word «disrupt» in a single
sentence.
The unique language style originated in the East End
of London during the first half
of the 18th century and relies on rhyme to disguise
words within a
sentence.
Conversely, if you habitually use fuzzy, ill - defined
words crammed into long and convoluted
sentences, you're training your brain — and the brains
of your team members — to think less clearly.
Whether it's just a few
words, or a couple
sentences, many
of the world's most valuable startup companies clearly understand their mission and have made it part
of their DNA.
So I know the difficult truth
of Moglia's
words: «If you have somebody who stutters, and you watch that person try to get through a
sentence: It breaks your heart.»
Those are filler
words that we often utter either in the beginning
of a
sentence or in - between ideas.
Since Arabic is written without vowels, the software must first understand the meaning
of the
sentence before translating the individual
words.
There are two places in spontaneous speech where filler
words commonly appear, Cohen explains: at the beginning (e.g. um, uh, so) and in the middle
of a
sentence (e.g. like, you know what I mean).
Strategists pointed to the addition
of the
word «some» in a
sentence where the Fed described the further improvement it would like to see in labor and inflation before raising rates.
The key is finding the right frequency, knowing which
words to use and being cognizant
of where you are placing filler
words in a
sentence.
That doesn't mean writing shorter content, but it does mean getting rid
of words, phrases,
sentences, you don't need.
Shockingly, these (roughly) eight -
word sentences are
of equal importance as your actual content.
There are a lot
of fancy
words in this
sentence so let's recontextualize this announcement.
- + * Most everyone probably thinks
of the Silk Road case when the
words «bitcoin» and «criminal» are uttered in the same
sentence.
Third a lot
of wallets support so called seeds, which are
sentences of 12 to 24 pointless
words.
Those are the
words I spoke as a trial judge in 1997 when I
sentenced Bobby Bostic to a total
of 241 years in prison for his role in two armed robberies he committed when he was just 16 years old.
Entrepreneur - turned - angel - investor Jason Calacanis doesn't mince
words, and this week's Too Embarrassed to Ask podcast is no exception: Asked by one
of our listeners if he regretted selling his shares
of Facebook when they were going for only $ 110 - 120 (versus $ 174 at the time
of this writing), he had a one -
sentence answer ready.
People barely tolerate those two
words in the same
sentence these days, not to mention in the context
of sharing «Good News.»
Then, in a
sentence packed with mixed metaphors, the Teacher concludes, «The
words of the wise are like goads, their collected sayings like firmly embedded nails — given by one Shepherd.»
If you read the
sentence, the
words — who the child in the mother's womb will be — mean what his / her life will lead him / her into becoming which kind
of human, that is, what kind
of temperament, attitudes, talents & gifts, and such that human will have.
Atheists: I know many there are many people that practice religion just by fanaticism, I've seen many people in my opinion stupid (excuse the
word) praying to saints hopping to solve their problems by repeating pre-made
sentences over and over, but there are others different, I don't think Religion and Science need to be opposites, I believe in God, I'm Catholic and I have many reasons to believe in him, I don't think however that we should pray instead
of looking for the cause and applying a solution, Atheists think they are smart because they focus on Science and technology instead
of putting their faith in a God, I don't think God will solve our problems, i think he gave us the means to solve them by ourselves that's were God is, also I think that God created everything but not as a Magical thing but stablishing certain rules like Physics and Quimics etc. he's not an idiot and he knew how to make it so everything was on balance, he's the Scientist
of Scientist the Mathematic
of Mathematics, the Physician
of Physicians, from the tiny little fact that a mosquito, an insect species needs to feed from blood from a completely different species, who created the mosquitos that way?
Six
of nine and half - dozen
of the other at 3 am The meaning
of the
sentence is clear irregardless
of the
words I happened to use.
I would also propose that God is not a Christian, and that reading or hearing Bible
sentences is not a requirement
of «salvation» — lest we reduce the cross to mere
words.
Perhaps the repeated use
of a particularly offensive
word in one judicial opinion and the appearance
of shockingly hostile
sentences in another only raise a suspicion
of antireligious bigotry.
Today I came across a
sentence which used the
word «vision» in Brennan Manning's book, The Importance
of Being Foolish: How to Think Like Jesus.
Although the argument is a mere two
sentences, it aptly summarizes why many Christians are no help in the pursuit
of racial justice, and it is loaded with a myriad
of bad ideas — an impressive accomplishment for 11
words.
Also, replace the
word «god» in that
sentence with the name
of ANY
of the 10,000 gods mankind has worshiped over time and that god's adherents would have made the EXACT SAME claim.
This is similar to a large group
of people sitting in a circle, where a
sentence is whispered to each consecutive person and the last individual states the initial spoken
words.