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64 Sentences With "wordsmiths"

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

A few elite wordsmiths — Chuck Lorre, Shonda Rhimes — earn millions.
It seems like our favorite wordsmiths at Merriam-Webster are paying attention.
Studios suddenly needed writers to provide witty dialogue, so they imported wordsmiths from New York.
The Writer's Room is set aside exclusively for visiting wordsmiths, so hotel guests can't reserve it.
I am sure that wordsmiths could coin some but they don't seem to occur much in nature.
It's a must-see for writers and wordsmiths and is well worth the trip to Long Island City.
Every culture has its great wordsmiths whose expressions and proverbs live on and circulate long after their death.
They are incredibly clever, incredibly hard-working, really gifted, or incredible mimics, incredible wordsmiths, but Jim is a fucking genius.
We cannot purchase the services of talented wordsmiths and expert editors if people are indifferent to the quality of prose.
Both Johnson and Mr. Trump, neither blessed with literary or oratorical skills, succeeded two of the most gifted presidential wordsmiths.
"Virgos try to be perfect with what they do and they're wordsmiths, which you can see with his lyrics," he said.
The show features astute wordsmiths (including a crew of beloved regular punsters) spinning clever and very funny puns to a usually packed house.
All of the champion wordsmiths had more in common than an aptitude for spelling: Six of the eight used the same coaching program.
They're both fiery wordsmiths, well-known for their ability to write spellbinding swathes of dialogue, not to mention their shared fascination with American politics.
And those words were penned by copywriters — wordsmiths who use their experience, knowledge, and creative prowess to convince you to take that very action.
Edmar Bacha is just the third economist to join the august group, whose 40 lifetime appointments are reserved for towering intellectuals and the finest wordsmiths.
Fine wordsmiths, they have many times saved me from myself by spotting errors and suggesting ways to make my copy clearer and more graceful. 5.
The union primarily represents traditional screenwriters — the 12,000 or so wordsmiths who dream up film scripts and annually churn out thousands of scripted TV episodes.
And Snodgrass writes about working with a network of wordsmiths and policymakers in the White House and other agencies, just as the best Cabinet speechwriters do.
"The Stephens" (Bannon and Miller) remained top wordsmiths, joined this time by a bigger circle that included Vice President Pence, Ivanka and Jared Kushner, Gary Cohn, Dina Powell and Hope Hicks.
Casal's and Diggs's reputations as wordsmiths precede them; the two were founding members of the collaborative hip-hop ensemble the GetBack, and have worked together musically in a number of contexts.
So, of course, being a young upstart in the rap game herself, Iggy Azalea was in serious need of some sparkly accessories in order to properly stunt on her fellow female wordsmiths.
For the EP's "Geomancer," Recloose recruited Ezrakh, a vocalist and producer known for his work with New Jersey's Thread collective, to lend some comforting croons reminiscent of Chicago wordsmiths like Jamie Principle.
Mandy Moore is already hooked: Crosswords With Friends comes following the mega success of Words With Friends, one of the world's most popular games, which reigns supreme among wordsmiths and grammar aficionados alike.
The bold wordsmiths of the country's ruling party announced a list of new sayings on Thursday meant to inspire North Koreans ahead of a once-in-a-generation "party congress" scheduled for May.
And I grew an appreciation for shows that were well-written — seeing the script for "The Haunting of Hill House" gave me a deeper level of appreciation for the wordsmiths behind the show.
While a little convoluted at times, her scrutiny is a boon for all those working with words, since picking a text apart is a type of mental exercise that all aspiring wordsmiths should engage in.
" Reince Priebus, chairman of the Republican National Committee, criticized Clinton during the debate and said she isn't trustworthy The wordsmiths at Merriam-Webster joined in on the fun with a nod toward Trump's unique use of the word "bigly.
Mars in Libra is about optics, but it's also about fairness, making it vital that you have wordsmiths on your side (like lawyers, writers, and politicians) if you're not already crafty with words to defend and drive home your points.
If wordsmiths had a Super Bowl, this event would be it — where the nation's most well-regarded grammarians, etymologists and language historians gather to nominate, and then debate, the words, hashtags and phrases that best capture the ethos of the past year.
Highly evolved wordsmiths, Emily Cox and Henry Rathvon, add: O.K., we've set a new record here for elisions and ellipses, because this passage comes from a sort of vocabulary book of Neolithic utterances, and each word in our passage starting with "acute" is actually the heading for a paragraph or more.
Inevitably similar grievances have been raining hard on the Swedish Academy's head since it disclosed Dylan's Nobel; this time, not just with who got excluded, though it's come up a lot (What DO they have against Philip Roth, anyway?), but over the whole idea of somebody associated with pop music getting the biggest, fattest certification for immortality global literature has to offer living wordsmiths.
The Arabic script that has been so integral to cultural expression in the Arab world, in both the meanings of the words and the aesthetics of the calligraphy, can be seen in her prints and drawings where she references the words of poets such as Adonis, Mahmoud Darwish, and Saint-Jean Perse, as well as much earlier oral wordsmiths from the pre-Islamic period.
Rowley suffered a cerebral hemorrhage in New York in February 2011 and died there on 1 March.Leeds, Adrian: Inspired by Paris: the Wordsmiths of Our Time, Parler Paris, 2 March 2011.
But it has to > be done responsibly. In 1997 Sergei married Svetlana Mikhailova (author of the television projects "Wordsmiths" and "Canon"). In 1998 their daughter Olga was born, followed in 2002 by a son, Alexander.
In his dialogue Gorgias, Plato presents the sophists as wordsmiths who ensnared and used the malleable doxa of the multitude to their advantage without shame.Plato. [380 B.C.E.]. Gorgias, translated by B. Jowett. – via Internet Classics Archive.
In 2015, Azino founded the Lagos International Poetry Festival (LIPFEST), an annual event of poetry, performance, and conversations, described as "a roll call of wordsmiths, artists, poetry merchants and deep-thinkers". The 2017 edition was themed "Bridges from Walls".
His ashes were interred at Brookside Cemetery in Watertown, New York, next to his parents.Hart Seely, "On the write track; Channel your inner novelist by tracing the footsteps of these noted Upstate New York wordsmiths," The Post- Standard, April 29, 2012.
However, some great writers may have already suffered from writer's block years before Bergler described it, such as Herman Melville, who quit writing novels a few years after writing Moby-Dick.Miller, John J. “Wordsmiths Without Words.” National Review 68.9 (2016): 23-24. Academic Search Premier. Web.
Future Educators of America, War Chiefs, Step Team, SADD, Smoke Signals student newspaper, Wordsmiths, Minority Council, Political Theory, Pi Club, Book Club, Bowling Club, SOUL, Aviation Club, Anime Club, Ultimate Frisbee Club, Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Movie Club, and the Technology Club, Stylemarchers, and ping pong club.
Rusty trombone is part of the 2006 party game PervArtistry, where individuals draw sexual pictures on a board and other players try to guess the sexual synonym for that image.Taormino, Tristan. (May 3, 2006) The Village Voice. Lexicon of lust: West village bar hosts a game for pervy wordsmiths.
For example, in the comic playwright The Clouds, Aristophanes criticizes the sophists as hairsplitting wordsmiths, and makes Socrates their representative.Aristophanes' "clouds"; Aeschines 1.173; Diels & Kranz, "Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker", 80 A 21 Their attitude, coupled with the wealth garnered by many of the sophists, eventually led to popular resentment against sophist practitioners and the ideas and writings associated with sophism.
Lorin Stein was named editor of The Paris Review in April 2010. He oversaw a redesign of the magazine's print edition and its website, both of which were met with critical acclaim. In September 2010, the Review made available online its entire archive of interviews.Garner, Dwight (October 22, 2010), "Paris Review Editor Frees Menagerie of Wordsmiths", in The New York Times.
His firm created new names for companies and brands. The 2004 book he co-authored, The Making of a Name, was described by Library Journal as "an authoritative and fascinating book on names and naming that will be used by entrepreneurs, students, inventors, marketers, and wordsmiths at all levels."Library Journal, New York: January 2005, Vol. 130, Issue 1, page 126.
Adesioye was one of the founding editors (Deputy Editor) of NBC's African-American news site TheGrio.com and was a Contributing Editor for AOL Blackvoices before it became Huffington Post Black. She has been describedThe Atlanta Post: 11 Sharp Black Commentators You Should Be Following as one of "11 black commentators you should be following" and has been named one of Nigeria's top wordsmiths.
Roughly 33% of the company's products are sold around Christmas. In 2005, 70% of its cards had licensed photos, while 30% had photos produced by "in-house and freelance artists". NobleWorks commissions cartoonists whose work has The New Yorker, Penthouse and Mad to create designs for the greeting cards. It then sends the cartoons to several dozen wordsmiths who come up with the text.
Alison and Maud is a radio programme written by Sue Limb which aired in two series from December 2002 to April 2004. There were twelve 25 minute episodes in total and it was originally broadcast on BBC Radio 4 and has subsequently been repeated on BBC Radio 7. It stars Denise Coffey and Miriam Margolyes together with other cast members of Limb's previous Radio 4 comedy series The Wordsmiths at Gorsemere.
Smith Journal was a quarterly Australian magazine based in Melbourne, Australia. Founded in 2011, it ceased publication in December 2019. The publication focused on history, photography, art, and design, but also included articles on architecture, fashion, science, DIY, adventure, and literature. The magazine's title is derived from the traditional artisans and craftsmen – such as wordsmiths or blacksmiths – who embody the down-to-earth quality the magazine attempted to emulate.
In 1957, however, Enzensberger admitted in a written statement that no other contemporary German magazine attained the Spiegels level of objectivity. Opinions about the level of language employed by Der Spiegel changed in the late 1990s. After hiring many of Germany's best feature writers, Der Spiegel has become known for its "Edelfedern" ("noble quills"—wordsmiths). The magazine frequently wins the Egon Erwin Kisch Prize for the best German feature.
Open all year round. The Winter Words Festival, first held in 2004, is a 10-day literary festival that takes place every year in early February. Most events take place at the Pitlochry Festival Theatre, which attracts over 40 authors, broadcasters, wordsmiths and personalities. The sound and light show, The Enchanted Forest, takes place in Pitlochry's nearby Faskally Wood every year in October, attracting 70,000 visitors to the town.
On radio, Coffey featured in The Wordsmiths at Gorsemere, in the first series of The Burkiss Way and in The Next Programme Follows Almost Immediately and has made guest appearances on several programmes, including I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue and Just a Minute. She starred with Miriam Margolyes in two series of Alison and Maud (2002–4). She was also a regular panelist on The Law Game.
As acknowledged by a number of scholars and wordsmiths, > "...a story has as many versions as it has readers. Everyone takes what he > wants or can from it and thus changes it to his measure. Some pick out parts > and reject the rest, some strain the story through their mesh of prejudice, > some paint it with their own delight." > — John Steinbeck, The Winter of Our Discontent (1961) There are no simple relations between these levels.
The comic playwright Aristophanes, a contemporary of the sophists, criticized the sophists as hairsplitting wordsmiths. Aristophanes, however, made no distinction between sophists and philosophers, and showed either of them as willing to argue any position for the right fee. In Aristophanes's comedic play The Clouds, Strepsiades seeks the help of Socrates (a parody of the actual philosopher) in an effort to avoid paying his debts. In the play, Socrates promises to teach Strepsiades' son to argue his way out of paying his debts.
Hinwood worked as an artist in the Queensland Natural History Museum for four years. In 1976, she won a national competition to complete the set of carvings on the Great Court of University of Queensland and has since completed over 250 works for the university. In addition to the work in the Great Court, she also carved the sculptures for the university's Wordsmiths Cafe using themes inspired by the University of Queensland Press. In 1986, Hinwood won a Winston Churchill Memorial Fellowship for sculpture.
Frawley made two television appearances the year before his death. His appearance on the panel show I've Got a Secret on May 3, 1965, consisted of contestants guessing Frawley's "secret", which was that he was the first performer ever to sing "My Melancholy Baby", in 1912."I've Got a Secret Episode Guide" "Week 673, 5/3/65", Carson & Company Wordsmiths, 2009; retrieved June 2, 2017. He had performed that song previously on television, as Fred Mertz, in the 1958 episode "Lucy Goes to Sun Valley" on the Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour.
Most are affected by a variety of radiation-induced infirmities, such as somewhat short-term memories and deformities varying in severity by individual. There are exceptions, Mutes with excellent recall who keep the tribe's traditions alive through an oral tradition of story-telling. These Mutes are known as 'wordsmiths'. The Mutes would not present a significant threat to the Federation's vastly superior technology and weapons except for the existence of Mutes known as 'seers', who can foresee their moves, and 'summoners', who can use magical forces that the Federation has no defence against.
Mary was depicted as the central character in The Lambs of London (2004), a novel by Peter Ackroyd. She is also the subject of a 2004 biographical study by British writer Kathy Watson, The Devil Kissed Her, and a 2005 biography by Susan Tyler Hitchcock, Mad Mary Lamb: Lunacy And Murder In Literary London. She appears in the first chapter of Lisa Appignanesi's book on women and mental illness, Mad, Bad, & Sad. The Lambs appear in one episode of Sue Limb's radio comedy The Wordsmiths at Gorsemere, a pastiche of the poet William Wordsworth and his circle at Grasmere.
It seemed only natural that this largely blank canvas would absorb the creative spirits still present in South Africa; coaxing material in spoken, written and sung form. The initial intake of announcers16, who were all professionally trained as teachers, proved to be jacks of all trades, interchangeably writing, producing and announcing. Given no guiding course on broadcasting, these announcers crafted their own styles, laying the foundation of a broadcasting culture that celebrates uniqueness. The realm of radio drama became the home for wordsmiths like novelist Muntu Xulu, a young D.B.Z Ntuli, linguist and oral poetry critic P.N. Msimang, and old hand R.R.R Dhlomo17.
McSherry couldn't recall a prior case where an individual asserted a domain name was libelous. Jack Bremer of The First Post wrote that the attempt by Beck's lawyers arguing the domain name of the website was itself defamatory had likely never occurred before in the field of information technology law. Media commentators, including Paul Schmelzer of the Minnesota Independent, Andy Carvin of National Public Radio, and Andrew Allemann of Domain Name Wire, considered Randazza's legal brief entertainingly written. Writing for Bostonist, Rick Sawyer called Randazza's legal brief very funny and considered him among the uproariously amusing wordsmiths in North Shore, Massachusetts.
But nowadays, the manuscript is more often read on a computer display and text corrections are entered directly. The nearly universal adoption of computerized systems for editing and layout in newspapers and magazines has also led copy editors to become more involved in the design and the technicalities of production. Technical knowledge is therefore sometimes considered as important as writing ability, though this is truer in journalism than it is in book publishing. Hank Glamann, the co-founder of the American Copy Editors Society, made the following observation about ads for copy editor positions at American newspapers: > We want them to be skilled grammarians and wordsmiths and write bright and > engaging headlines and must know Quark.
Garrett began writing songs on guitar at the age of thirteen and put out several demos while living around Burbank, Glendale and Echo Park in Los Angeles in his youth. At age 22 he moved to Davis, California where he completed his first official recording, the in His Arms EP. Pierce then moved to San Francisco in 2005 where he began to perform at venues such as Bottom of the Hill and the Great American Music Hall and subsequently recorded his first full album, Like a Moth, which featured fellow musicians Jolie Holland and Matt Bauer. Critics favorably compared the songs to other moody wordsmiths such as Mark Kozelek and Will Oldham.
Post office and shops Straits Estate is a housing estate located near Sedgley, West Midlands, England, to the north-west of Gornal Ward, and was built for homeowners during the late 1950s and early 1960s. The streets within the estate are all named after famous poets and wordsmiths. It was originally known as the Conqueror's Farm housing estate after a farm which had been situated in the local area, but the Straits name was adopted by the local community soon afterwards as it was situated around The Straits, a main through route along which several shops to serve the new estate were built. The estate was constructed around a large residence called The Straits House, which was built during the 1830s.
The book was positively received by critics and press outlets. Library Journal says it is, “filled with real tools and overflowing with inspiration… a good read even for nonartists interested in learning more about hip-hop creativity, personalities, and history, this offers insights into music and poetry. Highly recommended,” Hip Hop Connection called it “a complete guide to the art and craft of the MC, anyone who's serious about becoming a rapper should read this first… a vital and vibrant expose of a much misunderstood art form,” and Campus Circle give it a “Grade: A+”. XXL magazine said "over 100 rappers have offered their insight on the artform for aspiring wordsmiths", while Yale University Press's Anthology of Rap referred to How to Rap's "rich array of interviews with old school and new school artists,"Adam Bradley, 2011, The Anthology of Rap, Yale University Press, Introduction, p.xlvii.
Limb's debut novel Up the Garden Path was adapted as a BBC Radio 4 sitcom,BBC Media Centre - Up The Garden Path Accessed 2016-10-29.BBC Radio Four Extra - Up The Garden Path Accessed 2016-10-29. and subsequently made the transition to ITV television.IMDB - Up The Garden Path Accessed 2016-10-29.ITV Studios - Up The Garden Path Accessed 2016-10-29. For Radio 4, she has written a number of comedy series (which pay unusual attention to music and sound-effects): The Wordsmiths at Gorsemere (a pastiche of the poet William Wordsworth and his circle at Grasmere, two series), The Sit Crom (set in the English Civil War), Four Joneses and a Jenkins (a reference to Four Weddings and a Funeral); Alison and Maud; and most recently Gloomsbury, "a rhapsody about bohemians", about members of the Bloomsbury Group and starring Miriam Margolyes and Alison Steadman.

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