When it comes to American jobs and the global economy, the best words to sum up public attitudes are frustration and fatalism. |
|
So, to sum up and conclude, if you want the long version of a great story, go rent the first two movies, then catch the last one in theaters. |
|
He used it to sum up the persuasive power of authoritatively made numeric presentations to a largely innumerate public. |
|
Lance Wright's closing remarks did not record well, so instead he agreed to sum up his points in an interview. |
|
The debate will finish with the moderator asking a general question to both Leaders in order to sum up. |
|
Having been so wordy, I am now lost for the right words to sum up how this whole thing has made me feel. |
|
So to sum up we've got a very good OS that's a pleasure to use, and that you're going to think just about justifies the vast hardware footprint. |
|
It is very difficult to sum up in a few phrases the kind of apocalypses that this country is facing. |
|
At the end of the fortnight-long activities, a function was held to sum up the event. |
|
And he knows how to sum up his point in a few words with no gobbledygook or claptrap! |
|
It is still unfolding, even as hacks and ex-advisers rush to sum up or cash in. |
|
Despite his exemplary crooning ability and his propensity for loungey arrangements, his was never an easy career to sum up. |
|
The scene of Yuri writing his poems in an ice-encrusted dacha with wolves and winds howling outside seems to sum up this land. |
|
So to sum up the subject of bait and groundbait, I have to say that you really cannot take too much bait. |
|
It would be very difficult to sum up all lessons I learned from this experience. |
|
There is far too much information to sum up in three minutes, but it is all in there for you to read up. |
|
Lobi, if you had to sum up your new album in a few words, how would you describe it? |
|
In wisely sidestepping the hubristic folly of trying to sum up his own time, he achieved a sort of timelessness. |
|
You are now going to sum up the discovery of cold storage, using the answers above as a guide. |
|
Mr. Speaker, I would just like to sum up my hon. member's statements into a few words. |
|
|
Each learner who speaks will have to sum up what the previous speaker has just said. |
|
I think that it is a very wonderful phrase to sum up how I feel about the challenge we aim to discuss. |
|
Traditionally, it is the time for the President to sum up and draw conclusions. |
|
But they are either in my head today, are titularly significant or I've been wallowing in them pointlessly, and they together somehow manage to sum up my head, today. |
|
Mr. Hewson, I'm going to sum up what I understand to be the problem, and you can correct me if I'm wrong. |
|
And Marta Moreno Vega, an Afro-Caribbean expert on Yoruba philosophy, seems to dare you to sum up her ethnicity. |
|
A weak and ineffective Police force, to sum up, is a certain threat to the maintenance of law and order in this country, and the criminals know it. |
|
Tyler made a remark about Nunez not understanding the significance of having just lamped an Evertonian, and it seemed to sum up the whole evening. |
|
If you wanted one magic moment with which to sum up the championships, you would look no further than Eunice Barber and the last-round jump that took her to long jump gold. |
|
But challenges remain, and it took a 9-year-old girl in the panel discussion audience to sum up what the next generation faces. |
|
Participants were asked to sum up and classify the above answers in order of importance. |
|
I cannot hope to sum up this evening, in the space of a few minutes, a life and work as rich as those of our distinguished guest. |
|
You are now going to sum up the initiatives of the Michelin brothers, using the answers above as a guide. |
|
The test of this kind of model is not its mathematical or logical predictive power but its ability to sum up accurately the system being studied, the rightness of the fit. |
|
It therefore seems appropriate to me to sum up, in a few words, our vision for peace in the Middle East from the United Nations perspective and from the perspective of the Security Council. |
|
The two words that seem to sum up the moral climate of Washington during this administration are piosity and pelf. |
|
So to sum up, we could say that the trained observers take a firm stand in consciousness, unswayed by outer events, looking above and helping below. |
|
Up close, one sees that their fidelity is impressionistic: Wilson worked with painterly certainty to sum up atmospheres and rock forms in a few decisive strokes. |
|
We have tried to sum up our impression of the first six months of the year, against the backdrop of the economic crisis of which you are all keenly aware. |
|
Before discussing what may be the best way to support these victims and their families, I would like to take a moment to sum up the main components of the proposed legislation. |
|
|
The work consists of hundreds of images cut out from a copy of an eponymous book published in the 1970s by Reader's Digest, which set out to sum up the entire history of humankind in a single volume. |
|
As he tried to sum up his creation, his eyes slipped out of focus as he zigged into tantric philosophy and zagged into Anusara's metaphysical underpinnings — but that didn't really get him where he wanted to go. |
|
It is hard to sum up the situation in the public university system, but perhaps one does not go completely wrong in speaking of fragmentation and lack of recognition of Judaic Studies as a discipline of its own. |
|
When I went up front to receive it I did a short presentation to sum up my experience and it was eye opening for both my conference host and myself! |
|
So, to sum up your argument, what you are saying is that it is impossible. |
|
To sum up the method briefly, firstly an induction coil has to be taken from the Touchstone case and should be attached to the inside of the Galaxy Note 2's back cover. |
|