Luckily, some of those that do stand up to be counted in Bradford enhance your excellent readers' forum. |
|
The humble dagwood dog fell into such disrepute yesterday that the newspaper ran a readers' poll. |
|
It is good that he tends to draw back in the end, but it would be even better if he didn't pander to his readers' prejudices in the first place. |
|
Ignorance and skinniness may be bliss, but being big and shredded are most FLEX readers' goals. |
|
Paul Lewis regrets he cannot respond individually to readers' queries, but he will discuss some of the issues raised in his column. |
|
The teachers needed a selection of books that would catch the reluctant readers' attention and hook them on reading. |
|
We'd be interested to see whether our readers' views concur with our own so feel free to make use of the comment boxes. |
|
He thinks that being horrible to immigrants will secure the Sun readers' vote. |
|
It has recently come to my attention via the readers' opinion pages of this fine magazine that some folks don't find swear words funny. |
|
Compiled with the help of readers' nominations, it is a list of politicians, businessmen, humanitarians, artisans and more. |
|
Unfortunately, readers' affection hasn't necessarily translated into steady paychecks for the authors they love. |
|
Minimally, when this book is open, philosophical perplexities are there, right there, in front of readers' eyes. |
|
The purpose of my article was to draw readers' attention to risks of pharmacological drugs used in labour. |
|
His book opened many readers' eyes to the natural beauty of indigenous plants. |
|
When we excerpt full chapters, we often put the book's color jacket online to help increase readers' interest. |
|
Instead of rousing the readers' emotions by overt descriptions of violence, Visalam's novel concentrates more on the background to that violence. |
|
The authors will all be invited to write for the series because they don't underestimate readers' intelligence nor overestimate their knowledge. |
|
This almost always means advertising, the bane of readers' existence, but it's the reason most content on the net remains free for the asking. |
|
He made a telephone call to the Observer and with readers' help slowly began to piece bits of the puzzle together and build up the museum. |
|
In two studies in which readers' eye movements were recorded, we examined the processing of pronouns bound by universal quantifiers. |
|
|
He secured a try-out for his idea in a local newspaper in the United States where his wife was working and the readers' response was remarkable. |
|
The readers' actions would be governed by the social mores through which they are conditioned. |
|
My own search for this has proven unavailing, so I thought I'd call on my readers' knowledge in this matter. |
|
And since she realizes that outside editors often have a better sense of future readers' reaction than the author does, she'll often defer to your editorial judgment. |
|
Many people think that the book industry is just another racket out to make a quick buck by inflating prices and preying on readers' desire for good, cheap books. |
|
It isn't so long since we were carrying stories and readers' letters complaining about the state of the railway embankments on the approaches to Bradford. |
|
Is writing style related to readers' assessments of a story in terms of its interestingness, informativeness, dullness and other story characteristics? |
|
In an editorial in the November issue the editor admits that the readers' responses to this article had been numerous, negative, and often vituperative. |
|
Now, I'm sure that many readers' hair is standing on end with incredulity. |
|
The breadth of readers' experience has always been spectacular. |
|
It is the characters' many-sidedness, their irreducibility to a formula, that he believes accounts for readers' continuing delight in Joyce's narrative. |
|
American Forests thanks the American Society of Consulting Arborists for responding to readers' tree care questions. |
|
As the 18th century progressed, the content of encyclopedias also changed according to readers' tastes. |
|
Skillful readers' processing of text seems far too fast and efficient to be based on letterwise processing of its print. |
|
The theme and the discourses it produces challenge most readers' assumptions about the world and, in effect, help to both pluralise and hybridise the genre. |
|
Is there a relationship between Subordinating conjunctions, coordinative conjunctions and discourse markers and good readers' level of reading comprehension? |
|
The Sunday op-ed section will also offer a new readers' forum every week with more letters to the editor as well as multiple views on major issues. |
|
The Natasha of War and Peace, who anagraphically does not exist, in the economy of the book and in readers' imaginations is more real than Napoleon. |
|
Awards are the exclusive readers' choice awards in the eLearning market. |
|