Editors
in sentence
181 examples of Editors in a sentence
And the thing is that the algorithms don't yet have the kind of embedded ethics that the
editors
did.
He wanted to do a documentary on what his
editors
wanted.
And how do we make these tools, these editors, something that are just as fun as the game itself?
He used to work for two
editors
who said every story had to have at least one female source.
Now, I don't know if one of the
editors
was a woman, but that can make the biggest difference.
Suggest female sources to reporters and
editors.
And when that responsibility is diffused between a whole network of researchers, academics, industry sponsors, journal editors, for some reason we find it more acceptable, but the effect on patients is damning.
I know famous musicians, I know actors and film stars and millionaires and novelists and top lawyers and television executives and magazine
editors
and national journalists and dustbinmen and hairdressers, all who were looked after children, fostered, adopted or orphaned, and many of them grow into their adult lives in fear of speaking of their background, as if it may somehow weaken their standing in the foreground, as if it were somehow Kryptonite, as if it were a time bomb strapped on the inside.
I would send out hundreds of postcards to
editors
and art directors, but they would go unanswered.
And after a team of professional science
editors
went over this really simple explanation, they'd find fault with almost every word I've used, and they'd have to change anything that wasn't serious enough, and they'd have to change everything that wasn't 100 percent perfect.
About 20 years ago, I was asked by my
editors
at the "New York Times Magazine" to write a piece about Deaf culture.
A recurring discussion I have with magazine editors, who are usually word people, is that their audience, you, are much better at making radical leaps with images than they're being given credit for.
I do, however, collect new words much the way dictionary
editors
do, and the great thing about being a historian of the English language is that I get to call this "research."
Here's the thing: If you ask dictionary editors, what they'll tell you is they're just trying to keep up with us as we change the language.
Now I get to hang out with dictionary editors, and you might be surprised by one of the places where we hang out.
Now, it's not that dictionary
editors
ignore these kinds of attitudes about language.
To show you what I mean, we'll look at an example, but before we do, I want to explain what the dictionary
editors
are trying to deal with in this usage note.
I hope that what you can do is find language change not worrisome but fun and fascinating, just the way dictionary
editors
do.
It gets in because we use it and we keep using it, and dictionary
editors
are paying attention to us.
We are the new
editors.
And one of his
editors
said to me, "Hey, have you ever considered writing a book?"
So we caught our commissioning
editors
in Oslo, and we said, we want to make a documentary about the Bergen Railway, and we want to make it in full length, and the answer was, "Yes, but how long will the program be?" "Oh," we said, "full length."
And at the same time, I thought about this massive group of people I knew: writers, editors, journalists, graduate students, assistant professors, you name it.
She had to learn the finer mechanics of sales when she was starting her practice, and this skill now helps her write compelling pitches to
editors.
BG: Anders, I'm a former journalist, and to me, it's amazing that in the current climate of slashing budgets and publishers in crisis, Dagbladet has consented so many resources for this story, which tells a lot about newspapers taking the responsibility, but how did you sell it to your
editors?
Though many of these later appear in articles or broadcasts, keep in mind that these polished versions often combine the voice of the person who was there with the input of
editors
who weren't.
I have to thank the
editors
there for that title, and also for this artwork where you can see the 40-year-old intern in the midst of all the college interns.
Just to clarify: copy
editors
don't choose what goes into the magazine.
If we do our job well, we're invisible, but as soon as we make a mistake, we copy
editors
become glaringly visible.
"Where were The New Yorker's fabled copy editors?" a reader wrote.
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