No word in the press release on whether home flipping promoters ranging from Robert Kiyosaki to Dean Graziosi will act as consultants.
As The Economist went to press, word was that Allianz was planning to take over Dresdner, of which it already owns 21%.
So much so, he used the word 44 times in his introductory press conference in March 2012.
Word had got out among the press that "Twinkle twinkle little star" was Madiba's favorite nursery rhyme, so, of course, all the children sang it for him.
Four years ago, when Meitec began using the English word "outsourcing, " the local press was baffled.
The injunction they call for would have Apple take down all "Tiger" references from its web site, advertisements, all promotional materials, boxes, manuals, and software, as well as issue a press release that basically says "we're very sorry we ever even thought of using the word 'Tiger' to describe our operating system, " and that the press do the same.
But the store thrived, thanks to word of mouth and some positive reviews in the local press.
"This was an exceptional price for a work which really does merit the word 'iconic, '" Peppiatt told The Associated Press.
It started building its latest handset with scarcely a word about its plans, leaving competitors, fans and the press scrambling for news tidbits.
At a hastily convened press conference on August 20th, the three bank bosses studiously avoided the word gappei, or merger, preferring the vaguer togo, or consolidation.
After Pom Wonderful got word of the decision the other day, it tried to spin the ruling its way with a press release declaring that the 335-page decision was a victory for the entire natural-products industry.
FORBES: New POM Campaign Slaps FTC And Asks Public to 'Judge'
No word yet on which PC maker is going to pick up this design, but an Intel rep staffing the press conference told us it should arrive in time for the back to school shopping season, which usually kicks off in late spring.
Apparently trustworthy sources have been in touch and gave them the word that publishers are getting tired of spending millions of dollars to one up each other in front of the press and retailers, and might prefer to use that money to better their own campaigns and smaller, more focused shows instead of grandstanding on the E3 show floor.
The editors of the Associated Press (AP) Stylebook announced that after careful consideration, they had changed the usage rules for the word "hopefully".
BBC: Are language cops losing war against 'wrongly' used words?
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