Writes
in sentence
339 examples of Writes in a sentence
Young script writer Benjy Stone is asked to look after fading ,alchoholic ,swashbuckling film star Allan Swann who is appearing on the comedy show that Benjy
writes
for.
He is very shy in front of girls and stutters uncontrollably in front of them; however, he
writes
a book entitled "The Secret of Making Love."
I will not write of the non existent talent in this piece of trash, nor that I think any person (gay straight or refined beyond that) who
writes
positively about this is either playing tongue in cheek or totally high.
I really think it's funny when someone
writes "
I serious it Retarded of a cartoon."
"Unfairly maligned" "A hit" A gem" Who
writes
this stuff?
“The Law of Jubilee,”
writes
Graeber, “stipulated that all debts be automatically canceled ‘in the Sabbath year’ (that is, after seven years had passed), and that all who languished in bondage owing to such debts would be released.”
Even as people undergo dramatic self-transformations, altering their personalities with psychoactive drugs and their bodies with surgery, they describe the transformation as a matter of becoming "who they really are.""It was only by using steroids,
" writes
the bodybuilder Samuel Fussell, "that I looked on the outside the way I felt on the inside."
With sex-reassignment surgery,
writes
Jan Morris, "I achieved Identity at last."
“The House Republican plan would cut the top tax rate back to 30% or lower,” he writes, before listing a few “mights”: the bill “might…eliminate the estate tax”; and it “might eliminate tax deductions for state and local taxes, and tax some of the fringe benefits that are currently excluded from taxable income.”
As Robert Kuttner
writes
in a new book, the only thing missing from Hillary Clinton’s platform during the 2016 presidential election was social class.
Harvard Business School professor John Quelch
writes
that “business success increasingly depends on the subtleties of soft power.”
Without Peter,
writes
Konchalovsky, there would have been no Pushkin, Tchaikovsky, or Tolstoy, but only Pimen, Feofan Grek, and Andrei Rublev.
In The Anatomy of Fascism, Columbia University historian Robert O. Paxton
writes
that:“Fascism may be defined as a form of political behavior marked by obsessive preoccupation with community decline, humiliation, or victimhood and by compensatory cults of unity, energy, and purity, in which a mass-based party of committed nationalist militants, working in uneasy but effective collaboration with traditional elites, abandons democratic liberties and pursues with redemptive violence and without ethical or legal constraints goals of internal cleansing and external expansion.”
The spread of English among the cosmopolitan “Easyjet generation,” he writes, will lead to a “parallel society” in which “cultural differences” have been negated, and German national culture has been destroyed.
The only difference between the Darling and Osborne approaches,
writes
Ferguson, was “the timing of austerity,” as if this difference were not crucial.
In his book River out of Eden , he writes, "The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference."
Recently, Osnos writes, a high-level Chinese diplomat explained the threatened expulsion of New York Times and Bloomberg journalists on the grounds that “the Times and Bloomberg were seeking nothing short of removing the Communist Party from power, and that they must not be allowed to continue.”
“This denouement,” Tooze writes, “might have seemed a little cartoonish,” as if life was imitating the art of the HBO series “Veep.”
But Paul Lever, a former British ambassador to Germany, offers a more pointed answer: Berlin Rules is the title of his new book, in which he writes, “Modern Germany has shown that politics can achieve what used to require war.”
“Life goes on,”
writes
one survivor.
Arguably, the 2008 financial crisis was different, because, as the theorist Geoffrey West writes, it was “stimulated by misconceived dynamics in the parochial and relatively localized US mortgage industry,” and thus exposed “the challenges of understanding complex adaptive systems.”
“The portion of the world’s economy that doesn’t fit the old model just keeps getting larger,” he
writes.
Instead of discussing how to adapt specific policies to Poland’s national interests or amplify the country’s voice at the European level, PiS
writes
off all European measures and decisions as a direct challenge to what makes Poland Poland.
As the historian Diarmaid MacCulloch
writes
in A History of Christianity: The First Three Thousand Years, the two centuries before Luther featured near-constant challenges to papal supremacy on issues of philosophy, theology, and politics.
“I told him [Olmert] I had decided on a diplomatic option backed by force” to stop Syria, Bush
writes.
“Many women today earn significantly more than women in previous generations,” she
writes.
After the Soviet collapse, the West,
writes
Lukin, had two options: make a serious attempt to integrate Russia into the Western world by bringing it into NATO and offering a new Marshall Plan, or cut piece after piece from what he calls this “center of the inimical world.”
As Balluch writes: “A law banning a whole industry does far more economic damage to the animal abuse industry than anything else the animal movement could do.”
The first, Eaton writes, is an “ideological proposition” that has “never materialized in Muslim history because no Muslim state has even been theocratic.”
For example, he
writes
that it would be a mistake to assume that a world devoid of nationalism would automatically be peaceful and liberal.
Back
Related words
About
Which
There
Directs
Their
Would
First
World
Without
Think
Movie
After
People
Could
Really
Himself
Wrote
Story
Something
Should