Just a few words about an insightful Columbia Journalism Review piece on fact-checking.
With simple pictures and just a few words, the banking colossus forces us to contemplate our own views and understand that there are other ways of seeing things, and suggests to us HSBC can help provide that extra perspective.
Muttering just a few choice words, I rebooted, only to blue screen again.
ENGADGET: Entelligence: Stains on the sleeve of my operating system
So I wanted to begin tonight by just saying a few words about a tough day that we had today.
WHITEHOUSE: Remarks by the President at a Campaign Event -- Las Vegas, NV
But rather than just inventing a few words to make them sound alien, he devised a complete language, with its own vocabulary, grammar, and usage.
Before I say anything else, I want to echo what I know Hillary addressed earlier -- just say a few words about our friend and partner, Richard Holbrooke.
But first, I just want to say a few words about the economy.
WHITEHOUSE: President Obama��s News Conference on the American Jobs Act
Now, before I get started, I just want to say a few words about the drought, because it's had such an impact on this state and all across the country.
In places where I didn't have the lyrics just right, I added a few words as placeholders.
WSJ: Anatomy of a Song: 'Reach Out I'll Be There,' Inspired by Bob Dylan
This is just words and a few diagrams at this stage, mind, but if the patent gets granted, we could eventually see such a feature added to Samsung's smartphones or Galaxy cameras.
He had come from Haiti, and remembered just a little of it: a childhood spent near Cavaellon, a few words of Creole.
In other words, they contained just a few millionths of a gram of dust in each cubic kilometre.
"He's a man of few words but just patted me on the head which is all you need really, " he said.
In other words, this biodegradable polymer material, just a few atoms in size, can target and kill harmful microbes.
These implementations may still be a few years off, but speech recognition in virtual assistants (which includes understanding context, and not just words) is paving the way for these seemingly science fiction technologies to be realized.
In other words, the efforts of Mrs Joly are not about to undermine the towers of privilege just because a few politicians get caught with their hands in the till, trying to fill either their party's or their own pockets.
ECONOMIST: Eva Joly, France’s elite-hunting magistrate | The
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