Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Grace Aguilar" ¶ 6
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

editor's and notes
Nonnus does not present the conception as virginal ; rather, the editor's notes say that Zeus swallowed Zagreus ' heart, and visited the mortal woman Semele, whom he seduced and made pregnant.
He continued to publish and reprint later editions to which he added an index and editor's notes.
This volume contains the musical text of 70 pieces, " as well as the relevant plainchant melodies with their texts to facilitate alternatim performance, a facsimile page, editor's notes, and a Critical Commentary.
Das Schloß was published that year as a two volume set the novel in the first volume, and the fragments, deletions and editor's notes in a second volume.
The magazine also has health tips, polls, editor's notes, stories written by cat owners, cat product information, cat themed fashions, and a cat picture gallery, among other features.
An editor's preface notes that after each telling of the legend the pups ask many questions:
Translation, editor's Introduction, and notes © 1972 by Peter Sedgwick.
He goes so far as to blow his job offer at the Sentintal after he steals information about the case from the editor's desk notes and reports it during a Sun staff meeting.
" Hirsch also notes that, " Collected Poems features a thorough nine-part introduction and a chronology as well as helpful appendixes that include Berryman's published prefaces, notes and dedications ; a section of editor's notes, guidelines and procedures ; and an account of the poems in their final stages of composition and publication.

editor's and from
Second, the editor's cut, which is reduced from the rough cut, according to the editor's tastes.
A vital question is whether it is composed of sources which date from its editor's lifetime, and to what extent is it composed of earlier, or later sources.
Martin Noth holds that two different groups experienced the Exodus and Sinai events, and each group transmitted its own stories independently of the other one, writing that " The biblical story tracing the Hebrews from Egypt to Canaan resulted from an editor's weaving separate themes and traditions around a main character Moses, actually an obscure person from Moab.
It is a long-standing tradition that an editor's only signed article during his tenure is written on the occasion of his departure from the position.
" An editor's enthusiasm is soon chilled by the discovery that Isidore's book is really a mosaic of pieces borrowed from previous writers, sacred and profane, often their ' ipsa verba ' without alteration ," W. M. Lindsay noted in 1911, having recently edited Isidore for the Clarendon Press, with the further observation, however, that a portion of the texts quoted have otherwise been lost: the Prata of Suetonius can only be reconstructed from Isidore's excerpts.
Editors who follow Greg's rationale produce eclectic editions, in that the authority for the " accidentals " is derived from one particular source ( usually the earliest one ) that the editor considers to be authoritative, but the authority for the " substantives " is determined in each individual case according to the editor's judgment.
Tilton was then fired from his job at the Independent because of his editor's fears of adverse publicity.
The ISPF Workstation Agent can be used to edit PC based files from the ISPF editor to take advantage of the editor's strengths.
* Forbes, Malcolm S. ( 1974 ) Fact and Comment Knopf, New York, ISBN 0-394-49187-4 ; twenty-five years of the editor's columns from Forbes
If an outside scholar accepts the book review editor's request for a book review, he or she generally receives a free copy of the book from the journal in exchange for a timely review.
Urtext editions also differ from interpretive editions, which offer the editor's personal opinion on how to perform the work.
A compromise between urtext and interpretive editing is an edition in which the editor's additions are typographically distinguished ( usually with parentheses, size, greyscale or detailed in accompanying prose ) from the composer's own markings.
A volume published earlier was recalled from libraries and replaced with a volume that includes the Simla Accord together with an editor's note stating that Tibet and Britain, but not China, accepted the agreement as binding.
Miller's volume includes her editor's overview, the text of Thurman's memoir, extracts from the Convention's records, interviews with participants, and a postscript by Richard DeLong.
In an editor's note at the beginning of the book, Vonnegut claims to have found hundreds of scraps of paper of varying sizes, from wrapping paper to business cards, sequentially numbered by their author ( Hartke ) in order to form a narrative of some kind.
A Banglapedia Trust has been set up as a permanent institution to receive feedback from user and include, in the editor's words, contemporary knowledge or newly generated knowledge in successive editions.
He was expelled from the editor's role in 1974, and soon afterwards from the party, going on to found the Workers League.

editor's and tradition
In 2006, GamePro. com received a revamp, and in turn, another tradition was seemly dropped: editors would not reveal their true names, as the editor bio sections of GamePro. com may show the editor's true name ( seemly in the event that an editor chooses ).

editor's and
This is badly dated ( based on the 1873 Graham translation ), severely abridged ( leaving out, for instance, Book Six on defense which Clausewitz considered to be the stronger form of warfare ), and badly biased ( because of its Vietnam War era and the editor's hostility to " neo-Clausewitzian " Henry Kissinger ).

editor's and due
An editor's note, however, denoutes that this is due to Plug's looks taking after his mother.
Another important issue is citation errors, which often occur due to carelessness on either the researcher or journal editor's part in the publication procedure.

editor's and her
At her editor's suggestion, Lindsay removed it prior to publication.
One of her rivals for the editor's chair was the paper's high-profile columnist, Fintan O ' Toole.
Wintour wrote an editor's letter that complimented Betts and wished her well.

editor's and life
He is close friends with Laura's father, John Bow, who once saved the editor's life.
The film depicts 24 hours in a newspaper editor's professional and personal life.

editor's and cut
' Cut ' explicitly refers to the process of film editing: the director's cut is preceded by the rough editor's cut and followed by the final cut meant for the public film release.
There are several editing stages and the editor's cut is the first.
An editor's cut ( sometimes referred to as the " Assembly edit " or " Rough cut ") is normally the first pass of what the final film will be when it reaches picture lock.
Because it is the first pass, the editor's cut might be longer than the final film.
This is the time that is set aside where the film editor's first cut is molded to fit the director's vision.

editor's and with
The editor's main criticism of the trial was the haste with which it was conducted.
When she became pregnant with the chief editor's child in 1926, he proposed marriage.
Asked if he would change something he had produced on an editor's say-so, he answered with a flat " No. " But he added: " Oh, I will take a suggestion for revision.
Authorities: Editio princeps by Leo Allatius ( 1651 ), with the editor's famous treatise De Georgiis eorumque Scriptis ; editions in the Bonn Corpus Scriptorum Hist.
Porson at first took no notice of either, but went on with his Euripides, publishing the Orestes in 1798, the Phoenissae in 1799 and the Medea in 1801, the last printed at the Cambridge press, and with the editor's name on the title-page.
Alma became his collaborator and sounding board, with a keen ear for dialogue and an editor's sharp eye for scrutinising a film's final version for continuity flaws so minor they escaped Hitchcock's own notice and that of his crew.
The Works of John Home were collected and published by Henry Mackenzie in 1822 with " An Account of the Life and Writings of Mr John House ," which also appeared separately in the same year, but several of his smaller poems seem to have escaped the editor's observation.
In the strip itself, Minnie dressed up as Pansy Potter in compliance with the editor's wishes.
Stossel grew continuously more frustrated with having to follow the assignment editor's vision of what was news.
Traditionally, the copy editor would read a printed or written manuscript, manually marking it with editor's correction marks.
Ingrams vacated the editor's chair at the Eye in 1986, with Ian Hislop taking over.
He passed next to the editor's chair of the Literary Gazette, which he conducted with success for thirty-four years.
Entries with a blue background and an asterisk (*) next to the editor's name have won the award ; those with a white background are the nominees on the short-list.
Most papers operated on a shoestring budget, pasting up camera-ready copy on layout sheets on the editor's kitchen table, with labor performed by unpaid, non-union volunteers.
He commandeered a desk in the anteroom to the editor's office, a location that kept him closely in touch with the daily affairs of the paper.
One of Wild Kingdoms film editor's, Bernard Braham, A. C. E., was invited to membership with the American Cinema Editors in 1979 and won a prestigious EDDIE award in Hollywood for best documentary of the year, for the episode " Desert Spring.

0.676 seconds.