Sentences with phrase «written piece which»

Yesterday, Katie Hopkins wrote a piece which would not have been out of place in Nazi Germany.
I recently wrote a piece which addresses these issues and adds several more as to why progressive parents and teachers oppose Common Core
From the 1950s Feldman began to write pieces which bore no relationship to traditional compositional systems and which experimented with musical notation.

Not exact matches

I wrote up a few preview pieces, which you can check out here and here.
«Writing pieces for free / trade got my foot in the door and gave me a great working portfolio,» says Laura Viviana, copywriter, «which helped land my first agency gig.»
In response to a post by a Twitter user which said Musk should provide «some very strong arguments in a well written blog piece to win over the (myself included) skeptics,» the Tesla and SpaceX CEO wrote: «Movie on the subject coming soon...» Now, why hasn't anyone thought of that before?
Jessica Stillman wrote a great piece which discusses the scientific benefits of keeping all your stuff written down using old - fashioned pen and paper.
Writer Shirley Halperin wrote a post-mortem for the ceremony in the Hollywood Reporter titled, «Note to Miley Cyrus: Please stop,» which sounded the same notes and offered the same tidings as Yoshida's piece two years later.
I was intrigued by what is happening in Iceland, so the following is a piece I've written on it. It has some introductory macro-economics in it,  which I think it is good to keep in perspective as we consider the frantic attempts being made to prevent an economic depression.
One of the first pieces I read on the slope of the yield curve, which continues to influence my thinking to this day, was written in the 1980s by economists Arthur Laffer and Victor Canto.
In GMOs most recent letter, Jeremy Grantham leads off the piece with, «At GMO these days we argue over three very different pathways to a similar dismal 20 - year outlook for pension fund returns... A problem for investors following GMO's writing is which of these three alternatives to choose»
Bill Harris, co-founding but short - lived CEO of Paypal, has written an opinion piece on Bitcoin in which he claims the...
I first used that phrase (which I have since grown to detest) back in 2009 when I determined that the TSX Venture Exchange at 737 was quite cheap relative to its 2006 high at 3,300 so I wrote one of my first pieces for Streetwise Reports entitled «Sell in May and Make Some Hay» after which the TSXV peaked at 2,400.
The first piece in the collection, the title essay, was written in the days immediately following the attack, and Amis himself expresses reservations about it in his author's note: It «indulges in... a reflexive search for the morally intelligible, which always leads to the chimera of «moral equivalence.
I'm no particular friend of Piper or of Margaret Thatcher, but on the occasion of her funeral Diane Francis wrote a piece on feminism which makes interesting points.
The latest piece of research into the neglected area of covert political literature in early modern England, Greg Walker's impressive Writing Under Tyranny, identifies the moment in 1534 when the humanist genre of «counsel to princes» was forced to adopt coded terms which, in my view, reached their most sophisticated form in the repressive 1590s.
The writing tablet was a flat piece of wax which could be written on, and then smoothed out again.
When, in February, I wrote a piece about Anna Foa's research in my Catholic Herald blog, I added that I was still mystified by the hardening of Jewish opinion against Pius XII in the aftermath of Hochhuth's play Der Stellvertreter, which had depicted him virtually as a Nazi collaborator, given that the universal feeling expressed by Jews immediately after the war was one of gratitude and warmth towards Pope Pius.
I wrote a Belief Blog piece on Sunday called «My Take: «I'm spiritual but not religious» is a cop - out,» which has received more than 8,000 comments, many taking up key points I raised.
I concluded at the time of the riots that of all the things the government now needed to do, it was the married family which most urgently needed to be rebuilt: I was and remain as certain of that as anything I have ever written, and I have been saying it repeatedly for over 20 years: I was saying it, for instance, when I was attacking (in The Mail and also The Telegraph), as it went through the Commons, the parliamentary bill which became that disastrous piece of (Tory) legislation called the Children Act 1989, which abolished parental rights (substituting for them the much weaker «parental responsibility»), which encouraged parents not to spend too much time with their children, which even, preposterously, gave children the right to take legal action against theirparents for attempting to discipline them, which made it «unlawful for a parent or carer to smack their child, except where this amounts to «reasonable punishment»;» and which specified that «Whether a «smack» amounts to reasonable punishment will depend on the circumstances of each case taking into consideration factors like the age of the child and the nature of the smack.»
Chesterton's feelings about Russian anti-Semitism were reflected in a series of pieces published during 1891 (written in the form of fictional Letters) in The Debater, the school magazine of which he was co-founder and a prolific contributor:
But this rejection, in turn, prompted Hamann to compose and publish a piece called To the Witch at Kadmanbor, a «letter» supposedly written by Nicolai to an old sorceress, asking her to translate Hamann's Monologue from the Chinese of the «Mandarin» who wrote it» a letter that, midway through its course, suddenly becomes a delirious monologue of its own (in which the witch now appears as the Fury Alecto, but with two faces, «a calf's eye like Juno's, and the watery eye of an owl») before concluding with the recommendation that Hamann be forced like his illustrious ancestor Haman — from the book of Esther — to mount the scaffold.
Most of the time, Commentary published my pieces pretty much as I wrote them, which accounts, no doubt, for my high opinion of the journal's editorial practices.
Just when it looked like the storm had blown over, Pete Enns wrote an excellent piece for the Huffington Post in which he asks, Does God talk to us through fiction?
Similarly, Carolyn Custis James recently wrote a piece for the Huffington Post entitled «Why Virginity is Not the Gospel,» to which Dianna Anderson added a helpful critique.
Appropriately, Eslick writes: «It is likely the polemic against substance was originally motivated by Whitehead's reaction against mechanistic materialism, in which substances are inert, vacuous pieces of matter or stuff» (SCCW 504).
Similarly, Emma Green wrote a piece in the Atlantic called «Taming Christian Outrage,» in which she identifies ways that certain Christians have contributed to the outrage culture.
Of course, there is a wealth of other writing which they could read to similar effect, but this one is rather unusual in being a piece of Kierkegaard scholarship.
(3) I believe that there is a value in allowing this piece of writing to stand intact as an artifact of the year in which it was written.
Well, today is Amanda's birthday, which seems like the perfect time to feature this piece she wrote about what it means to be a local artist in a global world.
I wrote a piece on this a few years ago which a Christian author wanted me to expand on for a book he was writing, but I was too busy.
When Marcus Aurelius reflects on the eternal reason that has ordered things, there is a frosty chill about his words which you rarely find in a Jewish, and never in a Christian piece of religious writing.
Take HBO's gargantuan winter hit True Detective which (like Game of Thrones) features some stellar writing but also (again, like Game of Thrones) can't resist frequently reducing its actresses to writhing set pieces.
It is ironic and telling that within a few days of writing a post about how young people seem to be gravitating toward either neo-Reformed theology or the emerging church, I should come across a piece by Dan Kimball in which he speaks of the emerging / emergent phenomenon in the past tense.
He uses the same term in writing upon matters of conduct to the Corinthians, where he prefaces a fresh piece of teaching with a tactful acknowledgment that the Corinthians have faithfully followed the orders which they had previously been given.
Most of the time, people are referring to the bits and pieces of the Epistles, written largely by Paul — also by Peter and some other folks — and saying there's cases and scenarios in which the apostle Paul discourages women from leadership.
As I was writing my application piece and waiting for it to be read and approved, I watched several of the short videos in their «Examiner University» section which contain tips for writing good articles.
But why waste time and spend countless hours sifting through thousands of potentially pointless blog posts when Michael Hyatt has done all the work for you, and written each chapter in concise, bite - size pieces which can be easily understood and implemented right away?
One of the best pieces of advice I had from Mary Ellen Chase, that superb teacher I was privileged to study with in college, was that anybody who was seriously considering writing as a profession must be completely familiar with the King James translation of the Bible, because the power of this great translation is the rock on which the English language stands.
People do not seem confident about dismantling or defunding the ACA, or did not at the point this piece was written, which was earlier last week.
He has patched and altered it in a few places... I had to laugh at the great wisdom which so terribly slandered, condemned and forbade my New Testament when it was published under my name, but made it required reading when it was published under the name of another,» wrote Luther in a piece about translating the Bible, written at the Coburg.
Lindsey Hankins, a PhD student and expert on the gendered rhetoric of martyrdom, wrote an excellent piece for Scot McKnight's Jesus Creed blog in which she notes that John Piper has «stepped squarely into an age - old thread of Christian thought.»
I am very interested in and very keen on the idea of writing an original musical expressly for the cinema, taking into account the differences between the world of the cinema and that of the theater — which is rarely done when a theater piece is transformed to the cinema.
Having had a tremendous commercial success with the London production of Starlight Express (a musical intended for kids which is great fun, but not exactly a piece that I thought would change the course of Western art music), I thought there was now the possibility of being able to develop an area of my writing that I had been quietly working away on ever since I began composing.
Reread the article: the app is used as a study aid, it's no more part of religion than a piece of paper on which we write notes.
No doubt the single most important and influential piece of classical writing on friendship has been books VIII and IX of Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics, of which Konstan provides a lucid discussion in which he treats some of the issues noted above.
Which translated means I wrote it on a piece of scrap paper and shoved it in my folder of recipes that I plan to make some day.
There were three things about that piece of paper that made me cry: 1) her distinctive slanted hand writing which I will never forget 2) the date was exactly 1 year before she died and I'm guessing she felt good that summer and cooked a lot and 3) the notes she wrote to herself about what worked and what didn't.
I've also written another food / psychology piece for Eat North, which can be found here.
So here I am at 9PM on a Tuesday, eating dark chocolate nonpareils in bed and getting ready to binge watch start season three of OITNB (by the way, my friend wrote a brilliant piece on the show)(which I don't recommend reading unless you've started season three or thoroughly enjoy spoilers, like me).
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