Editor
in sentence
364 examples of Editor in a sentence
The teacher will look at her screen, and she'll see a blank text
editor.
I'm a copy
editor.
We make suggestions to the author through the
editor
to improve the emphasis of a sentence or point out unintentional repetitions and supply compelling alternatives.
Note that we give our proofs not directly to the author, but to the
editor.
The
editor
never sells out the writer, never goes public about bad jokes that had to be cut or stories that went on too long.
A great
editor
saves a writer from her excesses.
And he's one of my favorites, even though he sometimes writes a sentence that gives a copy
editor
pause.
I asked, through the editor, if the author would consider changing it to "All in the vicinity held their breath," because "all" is plural.
But the
editor
pointed out that we could not have "present" and "presence" in the same sentence.
The main
editor
guy sat me down and talked to me for a long time, trying to convince me I had a book in me about my life as a swimmer.
Their lead editor, Carol Houck Smith, leaned over right in my face with these beady, bright, fierce eyes and said, "Well, send me something then, immediately!"
The
editor
in chief of Women's Running magazine just put the first hijabi to ever be on the cover of a US fitness magazine.
Now, would any of those descriptions scream comic-book
editor?
Now, what I do as a comic-book
editor
is I make things up.
So, I am a Muslim, a woman, an American, a comic book editor, a short person, a lazy person, a nerd - you can ignore that, though.
So 24 years ago, I was brought to The New Yorker as art
editor
to rejuvenate what had by then become a somewhat staid institution and to bring in new artists and to try to bring the magazine from its ivory tower into engaging with its time.
And once the sketches are approved by the editor, David Remnick, it's a go.
This land, it can be based on the real world, it can be hand-crafted in the map editor, or you can, of course, download a city made by someone else and play in that.
The
editor
of Discover told us 10 of them; I'm going to give you the eleventh.
Writing under the pen name “Iola,” by the early 1890s she gained a reputation as a clear voice against racial injustice and become co-owner and
editor
of the Memphis Free Speech and Headlight newspaper.
It's not a human
editor.
So, on the day after the Brexit vote, in June 2016, when Britain woke up to the shock of discovering that we're leaving the European Union, my
editor
at the "Observer" newspaper in the UK asked me to go back to South Wales, where I grew up, and to write a report.
In fact, we engineered the first base editor, shown here, from three separate proteins that don't even come from the same organism.
After several years of hard work led by a former post doc in the lab, Alexis Komor, we succeeded in developing this first class of base editor, which converts Cs into Ts and Gs into As at targeted positions of our choosing.
Among the more than 35,000 known disease-associated point mutations, the two kinds of mutations that this first base
editor
can reverse collectively account for about 14 percent or 5,000 or so pathogenic point mutations.
But correcting the largest fraction of disease-causing point mutations would require developing a second class of base editor, one that could convert As into Gs or Ts into Cs.
Led by Nicole Gaudelli, a former post doc in the lab, we set out to develop this second class of base editor, which, in theory, could correct up to almost half of pathogenic point mutations, including that mutation that causes the rapid-aging disease progeria.
We realized that we could borrow, once again, the targeting mechanism of CRISPR scissors to bring the new base
editor
to the right site in a genome.
And when we attached that protein to the disabled CRISPR scissors, shown in blue, we produced the second base editor, which converts As into Gs, and then uses the same strand-nicking strategy that we used in the first base
editor
to trick the cell into replacing the nonedited T with a C as it remakes that nicked strand, thereby completing the conversion of an A-T base pair to a G-C base pair.
For example, a collaborative team of scientists led by Luke Koblan and Jon Levy, two additional students in my lab, recently used a virus to deliver that second base
editor
into a mouse with progeria, changing that disease-causing T back into a C and reversing its consequences at the DNA, RNA and protein levels.
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