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32 Sentences With "wordcraft"

How to use wordcraft in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "wordcraft" and check conjugation/comparative form for "wordcraft". Mastering all the usages of "wordcraft" from sentence examples published by news publications.

He also became famous for his extemporaneous promos—natural, effortless wordcraft dropped on a dime for whoever would listen.
The script by Nicole Jefferson Asher toggles between sharp observations about wordcraft and some "Dynasty"- or Tyler Perry-level soap operatics.
As species of personality go, the writer and the bureaucrat are closely related: they're deskbound creatures who enjoy the comfortable certainties of Microsoft Office and dazzling us with wordcraft, be it small-print legalese or the impenetrable prose of literary fiction.
In addition to ensuring perfect spelling, grammar, and originality, WhiteSmoke also includes writing tutorials to hone your chops, document and letter templates to provide an impressive presentation for your wordcraft, and a full-text translator and dictionary loaded for over 50 languages.
Jailed for Justice, pages 124–126. Celtic WordCraft, 2007. Other sisters have been arrested and sentenced to house arrest, community service, and probation.
As one of the founders of the Wordcraft Circle of Native American Writers and Storytellers, he has helped numerous Native authors get their work published.
Jacob won more than 50 awards, and has twice been voted Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers' Illustrator of the Year. In 2012, he won the Wordcraft Circle Award for Secret History of the Cherokees. Jacob and his partner Debbie Duvall, who have collaborated on a dozen books, received the “Oklahoma Book Award” in 2005 for their seven book series “The Grandmother Stories”."Book Review: Secret History of the Cherokees".
Boyden received both the First Place Award and an Honorable Mention for her poems in the 5th Annual Pleasanton Poetry, Prose & Arts Festival. She was named Writer of the Year for Children's Books, 2002-2003 by the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers. Wordcraft Circle also named The Blue Roses its Book of the Year for Children's Literature. The Blue Roses has received the 2003 Paterson Prize for Books for Young People, in the pre-K-3 division, sponsored by The Poetry Center at Passaic County Community College.
Savageau is of Abenaki and French descent. She was a founding member of a storytelling group who told stories in concert to adults as well as to children in schools and libraries. Her children's book, Muskrat Will Be Swimming, was a Smithsonian Notable Book (1996), won the Skipping Stones Award for children's Environmental Books (1997), and the Best Children's Book Award (1997), from Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers. For her work mentoring young and beginning writers, she was awarded Mentor of the Year from Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers (1998).
Portrait of Alice Azure Alice Azure (born July 30, 1940 in North Adams, Massachusetts) is a poet and writer who is of Acadian descent. She is a member of the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers and the St. Louis Poetry Center.
Francis was the National Director of Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers starting in 1992. He served on the Diversity Committee of the United Way of America, and was an active member in the National Coalition for Indian Education and the National Indian Education Association.
Hedge Coke won the Writer of the Year award from the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers for Blood Run in 2007. Hedge Coke was awarded an Individual Artist Fellowship by the South Dakota Arts Council to research the site and create the Blood Run volume in 2002/2003.
In 1985 Margaret Blackstone, a teacher at Travis, applied for and received a grant from the National Gardening Association;Cutler, Leigh (interviewer). "HHA# 00645 Interviewee: Blackstone, Margaret." University of Houston Oral History Project. Interview conducted on February 27, 2006. Transcribed in March 2006 by Mim Eisenberg of WordCraft. p. 1/20.
She has been nominated for several literary awards and honors, including Editor of the Year by the Wordcraft Circle of Writers & Storytellers in 1999 and Writer of the Year for her poetry by that same group in 2000. In April 2012, she was named Rockland Poet Laureate by the City of Rockland, Maine.
Blevins has won numerous awards, including being named winner of the Owen Wister Award for Lifetime Achievement in writing literature of the West, being selected for the Western Writers Hall of Fame, being twice named 'Writer of the Year' by Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers, and winning two Spur Awards for Novel of the West.
Other honors include a Rockefeller Humanities fellowship, a National Endowment for the Arts Writing Fellowship for Poetry, the Cherokee Nation Prose Award, the Hope S. Dean Award for Notable Achievement in Children's Literature and both the 1998 Writer of the Year Award and the 1998 Storyteller of the Year Award from the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers. He received the annual NWCA Lifetime Achievement Award in 1999.
In 1998, he was named Native American Editor of the Year by the same organization. His book The Telling of the World: Native American Stories and Art was named to the list of Best University Press Books of 2000. He has also received the American Book Award for Literary Merit and the Distinguished Faculty Award from Michigan State University. He was named a 2002 Wordcraft Circle Writer of the Year in Creative Prose: Fiction for Feathering Custer.
Byrd's 2011 book The Transit of Empire: Indigenous Critiques of Colonialism won the 2011 Best First Book of the Year award from the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association, and the 2012 Wordcraft Circle Award for Academic Work of the Year. Earlier, Byrd won the 2008 Beatrice Medicine Award for Scholarship in American Indian Studies of the Native American Literature Symposium for her paper "Living my native life deadly: Red Lake, Ward Churchill, and the discourses of competing genocides" (American Indian Quarterly, 2007).
Much of Wiloch's recent published writing is prose poetry, and has appeared in collections from various small press publishers including Snake Press and Wordcraft of Oregon. Wiloch has illustrated books by authors such as Bruce Boston, Robert Frazier, Andrew Joron, and Jessica Amanda Salmonson, and has contributed artwork to his own books as well. From 1988 to 1993, Wiloch wrote the column "Codes and Chaos" for PhotoStatic, an arts magazine. He was an associate editor of Sidereality magazine, 2004-05.
A little later in the Feet of Fines of 1198 the name is written as Cranele. Etymologists consider all these versions to be the fusion of the Old English words "Cran", meaning "crane",Pollington, Stephen, Wordcraft, New English to Old English Dictionary and Thesaurus 6th Ed., (2011), Anglosaxon Books, Ely, p.137 and "Lēoh" that together mean 'a woodland clearing visited by cranes'.Ekwall, Eilert, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names, Third Ed. (1951), Clarendon Press, Oxford, p.
The dialect is careful, the wordcraft generally sound. The movement is rapid, the incidents varied, and the piece as a whole absorbing. The reality of the piece comes chiefly from the reasoned presentation of the central issue: the conflict in Leather-Stocking between the forces which draw him to the woods and those which seek to attach him to his human kind. Van Doren calls Judith Hutter one of the few convincing young women in Cooper's works; of the minor characters only the ardent young Chingachgook and the silly Hetty Hutter call for his notice.
Hansen is a member of Investigative Reporters and Editors, the Association of Health Care Journalists, the Native American Journalists Association, the Earth Journalism Network, the Society of Environmental Journalists, and the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers. As a member of the Association of Health Care Journalists, she requested with other journalists that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) end current practices that restrict the public's access to health information."News: Letter to FDA demands that agencies end news gathering constraints." Association of Health Care Journalists.
In 1991, Penn was a Resident Writer at the Banff Center for the Arts. He received the North American Indian Prose Award from the University of Nebraska Press in 1994 for All My Sins Are Relatives and an All University Research Completion Grant from Michigan State University to complete the work. In 1996, All My Sins Are Relatives received the Critic's Choice Award for the Most Acclaimed Books of 1995-96. Penn was named Native American Writer of the Year in Non- fiction by the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers in 1997.
"HHA# 00645 Interviewee: Blackstone, Margaret." University of Houston Oral History Project. Interview conducted on February 27, 2006. Transcribed in March 2006 by Mim Eisenberg of WordCraft. p. 16/20. Retrieved on March 2, 2017. See audio file By 2002 the school had 637 students. By 2006 Travis had about 700 students, and by 2011 it was near capacity around 730 students. In 2004 the school's attendance boundary, along with that of Harvard Elementary School of the Houston Heights, was modified due to a vehicular traffic increase on Studewood Street, affecting 20 children.
Craig Womack is an author and professor of Native American literature. Creek- Cherokee by ancestry, Womack wrote the book Red on Red: Native American Literary Separatism, a book of literary criticism which argues that the dominant approach to academic study of Native American literature is incorrect. Instead of using poststructural and postcolonial approaches that do not have their basis in Native culture or experience, Womack claims the work of the Native critic should be to develop tribal models of criticism. In 2002, Craig won Wordcraft Circle Writer of the Year Winner.
Owens was named Writer of the Year Award from Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers & Storytellers for Mixedblood Messages in 1998. He received the American Book Award for Nightland in 1997. The books The Sharpest Sight and Other Destinies were co-winners of the Josephine Miles, PEN Oakland Award for 1993 and The Sharpest Sight won the 1995 Roman Noir Award, France's equivalent of the Edgar Award. Bone Game was selected by an independent panel of judges as the winner of the Julian J. Rothbaum Prize for the best book published by the University of Oklahoma Press in 1994.
Erdrich graduated from Dartmouth College in 1986 with a B.A. in Literature and Creative Writing. She earned two master's degrees from Johns Hopkins University, one in poetry (1989) and another in fiction (1990). Much of her career has been devoted to the teaching of writing; in 2003, she was named Mentor of the Year in for her work with the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers (An organization whose mission is to, "ensure the voices of Native American and Indigenous writers and storytellers – past, present, and future – are heard throughout the world!" Erdrich has taught at Johns Hopkins, Augsburg University and the University of St. Thomas.
Sanchez has served on many Arts Panels and Boards, such as Panelist for the Exemplary Arts Program of the California Arts Council and the California State Board of Education (1984); Literature Grants Panelist for the Michigan Council on the Arts (1987); Panelist for Artists in Communities (1985–86) and Artists in Schools Grants Panels (1988–89) of the California Arts Council; 2nd District Commissioner for the Santa Barbara County Arts Commission (1987–89); Task Force Planning Committee for the Sedalia Arts Council in Sedalia, Missouri (1993–94). In 1998 she was given the Writer of the Year Award for Poetry by the members of the Wordcraft Circle of Native Authors and Storytellers.
The Native Writers' Circle of the Americas (NWCA) is an organization of Native American writers, most notable for its literary awards, presented annually to Native American writers in three categories: First Book of Poetry, First Book of Prose, and Lifetime Achievement. The awards are voted upon by Native American writers, making it one of the few literary awards presented to Native Americans by Native Americans. The Circle (along with its sister organization, the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers) was formed as the outgrowth of the 1992 "Returning the Gift" Native Writers' Festival, a gathering of Native American writers from Canada, the United States, Mexico and the Central America. The NWCA maintains contact information for Native American writers and a collection of Native American literature.
Woody has worked in various programs teaching workshops, mentoring, as a consultant and lectures throughout the country. She has worked with the Telluride Native Writer's Forum, reading, panels, and workshops for Northwest Wordcraft Circle, Neah Bay, WA and Newport, Oregon; Southwest Native American High School Students, Telluride, CO; Young Writer's Conference and Performance, readings, illustration, poetry and short story workshops for Northwest Native American high school writers at Paschal Sherman Indian School, Omak, Washington; Grey Hills Academy Diné Fine Arts and Drama Festival, Tuba City, Arizona; and Flight of the Mind Writing Workshops for Women, McKenzie Bridge, Oregon. As an artist, Woody has exhibited regionally and nationally. She participated in the Pacific Rim Gathering that culminated in a touring exhibition in Hité'emlkiliiksix, "Within the Circle of the Rim: Nations Gathering on Common Ground".
MariJo Moore MariJo Moore is a writer of mixed Cherokee, Dutch and Irish ancestry, who frequently draws upon Native American culture in her poetry. She won the title of Writer of the Year (2002) by the Wordcraft Circle of Native Writers and Storytellers, one of the most prestigious awards in the Native American literary world. She has edited several collections, including Eating Fire, Tasting Blood: Breaking the Great Silence of the American Indian Holocaust (2005) and Genocide of the Mind: New Writings by Native Americans (2002), "Unraveling the Spreading Cloth of Time: Indigenous Thoughts Concerning the Universe, Dedicated to Vine Deloria, Jr" (2014), and "When Spirits Visit: A Collection of Stories by Indigenous Writers" (2015). She is also the author of "A Book of Spiritual Wisdom for all days", "Bear Quotes", "Tree Quotes", "Crow Quotes", "Spirit Voices of Bones", and "Red Woman With Backward Eyes and Other Stories".
Kirkus Reviews described the novel as "unrelenting" in its portrayal of life as "somber and bleak", with a "suitably ominous atmosphere" and a conclusion that is "astonishingly moving". It said that the plot developed "haltingly and predictably".THE SECOND LIFE OF SAMUEL TYNE by Esi Edugyan, at Kirkus Reviews; published June 15, 2004; published online May 20, 2010; retrieved February 9, 2014 Bronwyn Drainie, editor-in-chief of the Literary Review of Canada, characterized Edugyan's portrayal of rural Alberta as "vicious and hilarious and pitch- perfect", but said that the mental illness of Tyne's daughters was "not a very compelling fictional device". She also said that the novel had "illogicalities" and "too much telling and not enough showing"."Review of 'The Second Life of Samuel Tyne' ", by Esi Edugyan; at Quill & Quire; by Bronwyn Drainie; published February 2004; retrieved February 9, 2014 Similarly, Malcolm Azania said that, although Edugyan's writing showed "a poet’s attention to wordcraft" and "extremely refined skills", both the novel and its characters were "frustrating".

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