-
This "Streetcar" meanders along for much of the first two acts, more words with background music than music that drives the drama.
WSJ: Review: Andre Previn's 'Streetcar' makes it to NYC
-
"Today Aimee has finally spoken her first words, " Andy Copeland wrote succinctly, promising more details later.
CNN: SHARE THIS
-
But his assailant simply crushed him again, until just when he thought he could bear it no more he heard the first words of a new Arabic scripture pouring, as if unbidden, from his lips.
NPR: Armstrong, 'Muhammad: A Prophet for Our Time'
-
Simply put, the 10-40 rule states that the first ten slides of your presentation should contain no more than forty words.
FORBES: Some Prefer No Sex to Bad PowerPoint
-
I'll say a few more words about that in a minute, but first we should savour the symbolism of the fact that the government will not be eliminating the target measure of the deficit in the lifetime of the parliament.
BBC: Mr Osborne's unwelcome statement
-
"Oui, chef, " he said, echoing words he'd uttered the first time he'd met Bocuse, more than four decades earlier, as a chef's apprentice in Lyon.
WSJ: Celebrity Chef's Franco-American Quest
-
Murray appeared downbeat about his chances of winning his first major when speaking immediately after his US Open defeat, but his words were more positive on his website.
BBC: Andy Murray considers coaching vacancy
-
First, Wernicke's area, the part responsible for understanding individual words, was more active in autists than non-autists.
ECONOMIST: Autism
-
In other words, more are said to have "stayed" than were there in the first place.
BBC: NEWS | UK | Education | School exam results 'misleading'
-
At a little more than 2, 100 words, Obama's speech was about 300 shorter than his first inaugural address four years earlier.
CNN: Obama's speech ties current issues to founding principles
-
These words are nothing more than a not so thinly disguised gag order and a suppression of fairly basic first amendment rights.
FORBES: Gag Order Placed On American Airlines Employees
-
Economists like Robert Reischauer ruffled feathers several years ago by pointing out that talented, driven kids are more likely to go to college in the first place--that they succeed, in other words, because of their innate abilities, not because of their formal education.
FORBES: Five Reasons To Skip College