I love listening to sermons, I really admire people who are wordsmiths who can craft words in a way that holds people's attention. |
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No doubt some wordsmiths are busy scribbling for Monday's edition on how we had this coming. |
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Inventive wordsmiths and puzzlists have come up with all sorts of words, sentences, and even paragraphs that have this property. |
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While journalists generally consider themselves wordsmiths, working with numbers has become an inescapable part of their profession. |
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These wordsmiths include poets, novelists, literary critics, newspaper and magazine journalists, and many professors. |
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The truly great debaters and wordsmiths never resort to cheap discourtesy as a way to make a point and their arguments were stronger for it. |
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Composers, linguists, wordsmiths, poets, and all those in a creative sphere are all in their own way pursuing happiness and fulfillment. |
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But then, as academics and wordsmiths we always come back to either spoken or written words to convey what we experience deeply. |
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Every newspaper employs wordsmiths in the newsroom to rewrite breaking news collected by reporters in the field. |
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All you journalists and wordsmiths out there, it's time to pitch in. |
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This occurs, in part, because prominent writers and wordsmiths appropriate the phrases and repeat them in columns, interviews, and the like, typically without attribution. |
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The importance of words is a conceit of wordsmiths, certainly. |
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