-
She follows conversation, reacts, engages and offers unsolicited ideas -- usually in the form of a single word or gesture that makes clear what she means.
CNN: SHARE THIS
-
And that is, to the extent that they all use, in one form or another, the root word "Islam, " they almost immediately suggest to people who consider themselves to be Muslims, that they are all part of the problem.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Frank Gaffney: Jihad by other means
-
The word "wealth" does not appear in any form in the 31-page CBO report.
WSJ: Best of the Web Today: Give Us a Break
-
In the simplest form, it is just a word without the need to follow any strict taxonomy or definition.
FORBES: The Changing Grammar of Communicating Ideas
-
It would be great if the word (economic) cycle only existed in a singular form, and the only cycle we had in the economy was happy expansion.
FORBES: Chinese Quest For Shortcut To Greatness
-
But it says there was an earlier form of the word, supercalafajalistickespialadojus, first documented in a song in 1949.
BBC: Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious: What does it mean?
-
Also, these chains tend to rely, as In-N-Out always has, on word of mouth as their primary form of advertising.
FORBES: How America's Upstart Burger Chains Will Help McDonald's
-
In fact, if you word it differently, it might be more recognizable as a form of innovation.
FORBES: Serendipity Lies At The Heart Of Business Relationships
-
With the simplicity of spreading word of mouth online, this in effect is an accelerator to these earlier incarnations of fundraising and this form of campaign promotion.
FORBES: Donating Your Facebook Status
-
Word of a Sprint pay-as-you-go service crossed our desks just yesterday in the form of a leaked slide, and now Big Yellow has confirmed to FierceWireless that the effort, dubbed Sprint As You Go, will launch on January 25th.
ENGADGET: Sprint confirms pay-as-you-go service, promises not to throttle speeds or cap data
-
Australians have been using the word freely since its probable emergence in the late 19th century as a nickname for English immigrants, a short form of pomegranate, referring to their ruddy complexions.
ECONOMIST: Those whingeing poms
-
He also gets a lot of sales form word of mouth, referrals and from people who read about his company somewhere else online or in a magazine.
FORBES: Magazine Article