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  • Asked on April 16, 2021 in Meaning.

    It is quite normal to speak of positive consequences, although (see below) use of the term without context or detail can seem threatening. Does an individual understand such a concept and wish not to mention it? With context, the word itself has been used in many fields with associations of appropriate understanding or planning, resulting in positive outcomes.

    In these uses the term itself seems to be unintentional: in these uses it carries no stigma. What are consequences of your actions?

    Is it true that the term ‘as a consequence’ might often be observed in the wild in cases where someone is trying to avoid or explain a failure, perhaps with shorthand such as ‘dire consequences’ or ‘face the consequences’? You might be thinking of the open-ended declaration, “There will be consequences,’ which generally operates as a warning or even a threat. This does not make the base concept negative, any more than ‘face the music’.

    What are examples of ‘consequences’ referring to analytic concepts or positive outputs of particular actions? In relation to the Question, the important point seems to be the absence of any problematic sense at all of working against a conventionally negative association. The term appears to be neutral.

    On yourdictionary.com. org offers 101 user examples of the word “consequence” in normal use. This seems like a reasonable corpus, at least for straw poll purposes, with no inbuilt motivation to skew selection. ” In these cases he explains whether there are many examples of one’s meaning the consequence should be criticised or feared, welcomed or even reported? I went through them to determine whether these examples might in each case imply that the consequence should be questioned or feared.

    Disregarding eight examples of the slightly different usage ‘of consequence’ (although in these expressions ‘consequence’ operates consistently as a desirable quality), the remaining 93 break down as follows:

    negative Association: 32 (34%)

    neutral association: 33 (35%)

    positive association: 28 (30%)

    To be sure, in this list positive usages come out slightly lower than the other two categories (although including ‘of consequence’ would make positives the clear ‘winner’).

    If we include the examples of ‘of no/any consequence’, the figures change but still make essentially the same point:

    negative association: 32 (32%)

    neutral association: 33 (33%)

    positive association: 36 (35%)

    However, statistically speaking, either way the interesting thing seems to be that usage is pretty much evenly-spread. Without embarking on a major textual analysis across a multitude of publications, I can’t think of a more innocently democratic accumulation of instances.

    Some examples are more specialized. Do we have a relation between negative and positive? If do we have to use tech? What is the procedure that will use it?

    This article on parenting (on Boystown, pt. 71). What is positive reward? If your child likes it to the best of their ability and wants it to be, then it can be your child. Who are you? The

    Professional site internetretailer includes an article about e-commerce entitled simply ” Happy Consequences ‘.

    HiperCom.com. Global Data Synchronisation is a ‘boring subject with exciting consequences ‘, an instance where consequences are automatically so positive as to make up for initial struggle.

    A quick search yields an article in the professional journal Industrial and Commercial Training (Vol 47 #1, 2015), entitled ‘Employee empowerment: factors affecting the subsequent success or failure (Part II)’, showing that ‘consequences’ need not imply inherent positive or negative value.

    The book Transformative classroom management (Shindler, 2009)’Creating Effective Consequences Within The Social Contract’: Developing logical

    and related consequences is crucial to achieving a social contract that feels democratic and is built on promoting responsibility.

    The most successful consequences are those that are logical and related, built in proactively, reflect the buy-in and ownership of the students, and contribute to long-term growth and behaviour change.

    Who is the American historian Nathaniel Hawthorne, The

    House of Seven Gables: he then renewed the

    conversation, and made great pecuniary offers for the carpenter, in case the latter should give information leading to the discovery of the lost document, and the consequent success of the Eastern claim. 1752

    Mark Twain, A Tramp Abroad :

    But one is calm before St. Mark’s, one is calm in the cellar; for its details are masterfully ugly, no misplaced and impertinent beauties are intruded anywhere; and the consequent result is a grand harmonious whole.

    What does it mean if you’re not going to be a wise and wise man?

    • 661501 views
    • 109 answers
    • 243458 votes
  • Asked on April 16, 2021 in Meaning.

    It is quite normal to speak of positive consequences, although (see below) use of the term without context or detail can seem threatening. Does an individual understand such a concept and wish not to mention it? With context, the word itself has been used in many fields with associations of appropriate understanding or planning, resulting in positive outcomes.

    In these uses the term itself seems to be unintentional: in these uses it carries no stigma. What are consequences of your actions?

    Is it true that the term ‘as a consequence’ might often be observed in the wild in cases where someone is trying to avoid or explain a failure, perhaps with shorthand such as ‘dire consequences’ or ‘face the consequences’? You might be thinking of the open-ended declaration, “There will be consequences,’ which generally operates as a warning or even a threat. This does not make the base concept negative, any more than ‘face the music’.

    What are examples of ‘consequences’ referring to analytic concepts or positive outputs of particular actions? In relation to the Question, the important point seems to be the absence of any problematic sense at all of working against a conventionally negative association. The term appears to be neutral.

    On yourdictionary.com. org offers 101 user examples of the word “consequence” in normal use. This seems like a reasonable corpus, at least for straw poll purposes, with no inbuilt motivation to skew selection. ” In these cases he explains whether there are many examples of one’s meaning the consequence should be criticised or feared, welcomed or even reported? I went through them to determine whether these examples might in each case imply that the consequence should be questioned or feared.

    Disregarding eight examples of the slightly different usage ‘of consequence’ (although in these expressions ‘consequence’ operates consistently as a desirable quality), the remaining 93 break down as follows:

    negative Association: 32 (34%)

    neutral association: 33 (35%)

    positive association: 28 (30%)

    To be sure, in this list positive usages come out slightly lower than the other two categories (although including ‘of consequence’ would make positives the clear ‘winner’).

    If we include the examples of ‘of no/any consequence’, the figures change but still make essentially the same point:

    negative association: 32 (32%)

    neutral association: 33 (33%)

    positive association: 36 (35%)

    However, statistically speaking, either way the interesting thing seems to be that usage is pretty much evenly-spread. Without embarking on a major textual analysis across a multitude of publications, I can’t think of a more innocently democratic accumulation of instances.

    Some examples are more specialized. Do we have a relation between negative and positive? If do we have to use tech? What is the procedure that will use it?

    This article on parenting (on Boystown, pt. 71). What is positive reward? If your child likes it to the best of their ability and wants it to be, then it can be your child. Who are you? The

    Professional site internetretailer includes an article about e-commerce entitled simply ” Happy Consequences ‘.

    HiperCom.com. Global Data Synchronisation is a ‘boring subject with exciting consequences ‘, an instance where consequences are automatically so positive as to make up for initial struggle.

    A quick search yields an article in the professional journal Industrial and Commercial Training (Vol 47 #1, 2015), entitled ‘Employee empowerment: factors affecting the subsequent success or failure (Part II)’, showing that ‘consequences’ need not imply inherent positive or negative value.

    The book Transformative classroom management (Shindler, 2009)’Creating Effective Consequences Within The Social Contract’: Developing logical

    and related consequences is crucial to achieving a social contract that feels democratic and is built on promoting responsibility.

    The most successful consequences are those that are logical and related, built in proactively, reflect the buy-in and ownership of the students, and contribute to long-term growth and behaviour change.

    Who is the American historian Nathaniel Hawthorne, The

    House of Seven Gables: he then renewed the

    conversation, and made great pecuniary offers for the carpenter, in case the latter should give information leading to the discovery of the lost document, and the consequent success of the Eastern claim. 1752

    Mark Twain, A Tramp Abroad :

    But one is calm before St. Mark’s, one is calm in the cellar; for its details are masterfully ugly, no misplaced and impertinent beauties are intruded anywhere; and the consequent result is a grand harmonious whole.

    What does it mean if you’re not going to be a wise and wise man?

    • 661501 views
    • 109 answers
    • 243458 votes
  • Asked on April 15, 2021 in Meaning.

    It is quite normal to speak of positive consequences, although (see below) use of the term without context or detail can seem threatening. Does an individual understand such a concept and wish not to mention it? With context, the word itself has been used in many fields with associations of appropriate understanding or planning, resulting in positive outcomes.

    In these uses the term itself seems to be unintentional: in these uses it carries no stigma. What are consequences of your actions?

    Is it true that the term ‘as a consequence’ might often be observed in the wild in cases where someone is trying to avoid or explain a failure, perhaps with shorthand such as ‘dire consequences’ or ‘face the consequences’? You might be thinking of the open-ended declaration, “There will be consequences,’ which generally operates as a warning or even a threat. This does not make the base concept negative, any more than ‘face the music’.

    What are examples of ‘consequences’ referring to analytic concepts or positive outputs of particular actions? In relation to the Question, the important point seems to be the absence of any problematic sense at all of working against a conventionally negative association. The term appears to be neutral.

    On yourdictionary.com. org offers 101 user examples of the word “consequence” in normal use. This seems like a reasonable corpus, at least for straw poll purposes, with no inbuilt motivation to skew selection. ” In these cases he explains whether there are many examples of one’s meaning the consequence should be criticised or feared, welcomed or even reported? I went through them to determine whether these examples might in each case imply that the consequence should be questioned or feared.

    Disregarding eight examples of the slightly different usage ‘of consequence’ (although in these expressions ‘consequence’ operates consistently as a desirable quality), the remaining 93 break down as follows:

    negative Association: 32 (34%)

    neutral association: 33 (35%)

    positive association: 28 (30%)

    To be sure, in this list positive usages come out slightly lower than the other two categories (although including ‘of consequence’ would make positives the clear ‘winner’).

    If we include the examples of ‘of no/any consequence’, the figures change but still make essentially the same point:

    negative association: 32 (32%)

    neutral association: 33 (33%)

    positive association: 36 (35%)

    However, statistically speaking, either way the interesting thing seems to be that usage is pretty much evenly-spread. Without embarking on a major textual analysis across a multitude of publications, I can’t think of a more innocently democratic accumulation of instances.

    Some examples are more specialized. Do we have a relation between negative and positive? If do we have to use tech? What is the procedure that will use it?

    This article on parenting (on Boystown, pt. 71). What is positive reward? If your child likes it to the best of their ability and wants it to be, then it can be your child. Who are you? The

    Professional site internetretailer includes an article about e-commerce entitled simply ” Happy Consequences ‘.

    HiperCom.com. Global Data Synchronisation is a ‘boring subject with exciting consequences ‘, an instance where consequences are automatically so positive as to make up for initial struggle.

    A quick search yields an article in the professional journal Industrial and Commercial Training (Vol 47 #1, 2015), entitled ‘Employee empowerment: factors affecting the subsequent success or failure (Part II)’, showing that ‘consequences’ need not imply inherent positive or negative value.

    The book Transformative classroom management (Shindler, 2009)’Creating Effective Consequences Within The Social Contract’: Developing logical

    and related consequences is crucial to achieving a social contract that feels democratic and is built on promoting responsibility.

    The most successful consequences are those that are logical and related, built in proactively, reflect the buy-in and ownership of the students, and contribute to long-term growth and behaviour change.

    Who is the American historian Nathaniel Hawthorne, The

    House of Seven Gables: he then renewed the

    conversation, and made great pecuniary offers for the carpenter, in case the latter should give information leading to the discovery of the lost document, and the consequent success of the Eastern claim. 1752

    Mark Twain, A Tramp Abroad :

    But one is calm before St. Mark’s, one is calm in the cellar; for its details are masterfully ugly, no misplaced and impertinent beauties are intruded anywhere; and the consequent result is a grand harmonious whole.

    What does it mean if you’re not going to be a wise and wise man?

    • 661501 views
    • 109 answers
    • 243458 votes
  • Asked on April 15, 2021 in Meaning.

    It is quite normal to speak of positive consequences, although (see below) use of the term without context or detail can seem threatening. Does an individual understand such a concept and wish not to mention it? With context, the word itself has been used in many fields with associations of appropriate understanding or planning, resulting in positive outcomes.

    In these uses the term itself seems to be unintentional: in these uses it carries no stigma. What are consequences of your actions?

    Is it true that the term ‘as a consequence’ might often be observed in the wild in cases where someone is trying to avoid or explain a failure, perhaps with shorthand such as ‘dire consequences’ or ‘face the consequences’? You might be thinking of the open-ended declaration, “There will be consequences,’ which generally operates as a warning or even a threat. This does not make the base concept negative, any more than ‘face the music’.

    What are examples of ‘consequences’ referring to analytic concepts or positive outputs of particular actions? In relation to the Question, the important point seems to be the absence of any problematic sense at all of working against a conventionally negative association. The term appears to be neutral.

    On yourdictionary.com. org offers 101 user examples of the word “consequence” in normal use. This seems like a reasonable corpus, at least for straw poll purposes, with no inbuilt motivation to skew selection. ” In these cases he explains whether there are many examples of one’s meaning the consequence should be criticised or feared, welcomed or even reported? I went through them to determine whether these examples might in each case imply that the consequence should be questioned or feared.

    Disregarding eight examples of the slightly different usage ‘of consequence’ (although in these expressions ‘consequence’ operates consistently as a desirable quality), the remaining 93 break down as follows:

    negative Association: 32 (34%)

    neutral association: 33 (35%)

    positive association: 28 (30%)

    To be sure, in this list positive usages come out slightly lower than the other two categories (although including ‘of consequence’ would make positives the clear ‘winner’).

    If we include the examples of ‘of no/any consequence’, the figures change but still make essentially the same point:

    negative association: 32 (32%)

    neutral association: 33 (33%)

    positive association: 36 (35%)

    However, statistically speaking, either way the interesting thing seems to be that usage is pretty much evenly-spread. Without embarking on a major textual analysis across a multitude of publications, I can’t think of a more innocently democratic accumulation of instances.

    Some examples are more specialized. Do we have a relation between negative and positive? If do we have to use tech? What is the procedure that will use it?

    This article on parenting (on Boystown, pt. 71). What is positive reward? If your child likes it to the best of their ability and wants it to be, then it can be your child. Who are you? The

    Professional site internetretailer includes an article about e-commerce entitled simply ” Happy Consequences ‘.

    HiperCom.com. Global Data Synchronisation is a ‘boring subject with exciting consequences ‘, an instance where consequences are automatically so positive as to make up for initial struggle.

    A quick search yields an article in the professional journal Industrial and Commercial Training (Vol 47 #1, 2015), entitled ‘Employee empowerment: factors affecting the subsequent success or failure (Part II)’, showing that ‘consequences’ need not imply inherent positive or negative value.

    The book Transformative classroom management (Shindler, 2009)’Creating Effective Consequences Within The Social Contract’: Developing logical

    and related consequences is crucial to achieving a social contract that feels democratic and is built on promoting responsibility.

    The most successful consequences are those that are logical and related, built in proactively, reflect the buy-in and ownership of the students, and contribute to long-term growth and behaviour change.

    Who is the American historian Nathaniel Hawthorne, The

    House of Seven Gables: he then renewed the

    conversation, and made great pecuniary offers for the carpenter, in case the latter should give information leading to the discovery of the lost document, and the consequent success of the Eastern claim. 1752

    Mark Twain, A Tramp Abroad :

    But one is calm before St. Mark’s, one is calm in the cellar; for its details are masterfully ugly, no misplaced and impertinent beauties are intruded anywhere; and the consequent result is a grand harmonious whole.

    What does it mean if you’re not going to be a wise and wise man?

    • 661501 views
    • 109 answers
    • 243458 votes
  • Asked on April 13, 2021 in Meaning.

    It is quite normal to speak of positive consequences, although (see below) use of the term without context or detail can seem threatening. Does an individual understand such a concept and wish not to mention it? With context, the word itself has been used in many fields with associations of appropriate understanding or planning, resulting in positive outcomes.

    In these uses the term itself seems to be unintentional: in these uses it carries no stigma. What are consequences of your actions?

    Is it true that the term ‘as a consequence’ might often be observed in the wild in cases where someone is trying to avoid or explain a failure, perhaps with shorthand such as ‘dire consequences’ or ‘face the consequences’? You might be thinking of the open-ended declaration, “There will be consequences,’ which generally operates as a warning or even a threat. This does not make the base concept negative, any more than ‘face the music’.

    What are examples of ‘consequences’ referring to analytic concepts or positive outputs of particular actions? In relation to the Question, the important point seems to be the absence of any problematic sense at all of working against a conventionally negative association. The term appears to be neutral.

    On yourdictionary.com. org offers 101 user examples of the word “consequence” in normal use. This seems like a reasonable corpus, at least for straw poll purposes, with no inbuilt motivation to skew selection. ” In these cases he explains whether there are many examples of one’s meaning the consequence should be criticised or feared, welcomed or even reported? I went through them to determine whether these examples might in each case imply that the consequence should be questioned or feared.

    Disregarding eight examples of the slightly different usage ‘of consequence’ (although in these expressions ‘consequence’ operates consistently as a desirable quality), the remaining 93 break down as follows:

    negative Association: 32 (34%)

    neutral association: 33 (35%)

    positive association: 28 (30%)

    To be sure, in this list positive usages come out slightly lower than the other two categories (although including ‘of consequence’ would make positives the clear ‘winner’).

    If we include the examples of ‘of no/any consequence’, the figures change but still make essentially the same point:

    negative association: 32 (32%)

    neutral association: 33 (33%)

    positive association: 36 (35%)

    However, statistically speaking, either way the interesting thing seems to be that usage is pretty much evenly-spread. Without embarking on a major textual analysis across a multitude of publications, I can’t think of a more innocently democratic accumulation of instances.

    Some examples are more specialized. Do we have a relation between negative and positive? If do we have to use tech? What is the procedure that will use it?

    This article on parenting (on Boystown, pt. 71). What is positive reward? If your child likes it to the best of their ability and wants it to be, then it can be your child. Who are you? The

    Professional site internetretailer includes an article about e-commerce entitled simply ” Happy Consequences ‘.

    HiperCom.com. Global Data Synchronisation is a ‘boring subject with exciting consequences ‘, an instance where consequences are automatically so positive as to make up for initial struggle.

    A quick search yields an article in the professional journal Industrial and Commercial Training (Vol 47 #1, 2015), entitled ‘Employee empowerment: factors affecting the subsequent success or failure (Part II)’, showing that ‘consequences’ need not imply inherent positive or negative value.

    The book Transformative classroom management (Shindler, 2009)’Creating Effective Consequences Within The Social Contract’: Developing logical

    and related consequences is crucial to achieving a social contract that feels democratic and is built on promoting responsibility.

    The most successful consequences are those that are logical and related, built in proactively, reflect the buy-in and ownership of the students, and contribute to long-term growth and behaviour change.

    Who is the American historian Nathaniel Hawthorne, The

    House of Seven Gables: he then renewed the

    conversation, and made great pecuniary offers for the carpenter, in case the latter should give information leading to the discovery of the lost document, and the consequent success of the Eastern claim. 1752

    Mark Twain, A Tramp Abroad :

    But one is calm before St. Mark’s, one is calm in the cellar; for its details are masterfully ugly, no misplaced and impertinent beauties are intruded anywhere; and the consequent result is a grand harmonious whole.

    What does it mean if you’re not going to be a wise and wise man?

    • 661501 views
    • 109 answers
    • 243458 votes
  • Asked on April 13, 2021 in Meaning.

    It is quite normal to speak of positive consequences, although (see below) use of the term without context or detail can seem threatening. Does an individual understand such a concept and wish not to mention it? With context, the word itself has been used in many fields with associations of appropriate understanding or planning, resulting in positive outcomes.

    In these uses the term itself seems to be unintentional: in these uses it carries no stigma. What are consequences of your actions?

    Is it true that the term ‘as a consequence’ might often be observed in the wild in cases where someone is trying to avoid or explain a failure, perhaps with shorthand such as ‘dire consequences’ or ‘face the consequences’? You might be thinking of the open-ended declaration, “There will be consequences,’ which generally operates as a warning or even a threat. This does not make the base concept negative, any more than ‘face the music’.

    What are examples of ‘consequences’ referring to analytic concepts or positive outputs of particular actions? In relation to the Question, the important point seems to be the absence of any problematic sense at all of working against a conventionally negative association. The term appears to be neutral.

    On yourdictionary.com. org offers 101 user examples of the word “consequence” in normal use. This seems like a reasonable corpus, at least for straw poll purposes, with no inbuilt motivation to skew selection. ” In these cases he explains whether there are many examples of one’s meaning the consequence should be criticised or feared, welcomed or even reported? I went through them to determine whether these examples might in each case imply that the consequence should be questioned or feared.

    Disregarding eight examples of the slightly different usage ‘of consequence’ (although in these expressions ‘consequence’ operates consistently as a desirable quality), the remaining 93 break down as follows:

    negative Association: 32 (34%)

    neutral association: 33 (35%)

    positive association: 28 (30%)

    To be sure, in this list positive usages come out slightly lower than the other two categories (although including ‘of consequence’ would make positives the clear ‘winner’).

    If we include the examples of ‘of no/any consequence’, the figures change but still make essentially the same point:

    negative association: 32 (32%)

    neutral association: 33 (33%)

    positive association: 36 (35%)

    However, statistically speaking, either way the interesting thing seems to be that usage is pretty much evenly-spread. Without embarking on a major textual analysis across a multitude of publications, I can’t think of a more innocently democratic accumulation of instances.

    Some examples are more specialized. Do we have a relation between negative and positive? If do we have to use tech? What is the procedure that will use it?

    This article on parenting (on Boystown, pt. 71). What is positive reward? If your child likes it to the best of their ability and wants it to be, then it can be your child. Who are you? The

    Professional site internetretailer includes an article about e-commerce entitled simply ” Happy Consequences ‘.

    HiperCom.com. Global Data Synchronisation is a ‘boring subject with exciting consequences ‘, an instance where consequences are automatically so positive as to make up for initial struggle.

    A quick search yields an article in the professional journal Industrial and Commercial Training (Vol 47 #1, 2015), entitled ‘Employee empowerment: factors affecting the subsequent success or failure (Part II)’, showing that ‘consequences’ need not imply inherent positive or negative value.

    The book Transformative classroom management (Shindler, 2009)’Creating Effective Consequences Within The Social Contract’: Developing logical

    and related consequences is crucial to achieving a social contract that feels democratic and is built on promoting responsibility.

    The most successful consequences are those that are logical and related, built in proactively, reflect the buy-in and ownership of the students, and contribute to long-term growth and behaviour change.

    Who is the American historian Nathaniel Hawthorne, The

    House of Seven Gables: he then renewed the

    conversation, and made great pecuniary offers for the carpenter, in case the latter should give information leading to the discovery of the lost document, and the consequent success of the Eastern claim. 1752

    Mark Twain, A Tramp Abroad :

    But one is calm before St. Mark’s, one is calm in the cellar; for its details are masterfully ugly, no misplaced and impertinent beauties are intruded anywhere; and the consequent result is a grand harmonious whole.

    What does it mean if you’re not going to be a wise and wise man?

    • 661501 views
    • 109 answers
    • 243458 votes
  • Asked on April 12, 2021 in Meaning.

    It is quite normal to speak of positive consequences, although (see below) use of the term without context or detail can seem threatening. Does an individual understand such a concept and wish not to mention it? With context, the word itself has been used in many fields with associations of appropriate understanding or planning, resulting in positive outcomes.

    In these uses the term itself seems to be unintentional: in these uses it carries no stigma. What are consequences of your actions?

    Is it true that the term ‘as a consequence’ might often be observed in the wild in cases where someone is trying to avoid or explain a failure, perhaps with shorthand such as ‘dire consequences’ or ‘face the consequences’? You might be thinking of the open-ended declaration, “There will be consequences,’ which generally operates as a warning or even a threat. This does not make the base concept negative, any more than ‘face the music’.

    What are examples of ‘consequences’ referring to analytic concepts or positive outputs of particular actions? In relation to the Question, the important point seems to be the absence of any problematic sense at all of working against a conventionally negative association. The term appears to be neutral.

    On yourdictionary.com. org offers 101 user examples of the word “consequence” in normal use. This seems like a reasonable corpus, at least for straw poll purposes, with no inbuilt motivation to skew selection. ” In these cases he explains whether there are many examples of one’s meaning the consequence should be criticised or feared, welcomed or even reported? I went through them to determine whether these examples might in each case imply that the consequence should be questioned or feared.

    Disregarding eight examples of the slightly different usage ‘of consequence’ (although in these expressions ‘consequence’ operates consistently as a desirable quality), the remaining 93 break down as follows:

    negative Association: 32 (34%)

    neutral association: 33 (35%)

    positive association: 28 (30%)

    To be sure, in this list positive usages come out slightly lower than the other two categories (although including ‘of consequence’ would make positives the clear ‘winner’).

    If we include the examples of ‘of no/any consequence’, the figures change but still make essentially the same point:

    negative association: 32 (32%)

    neutral association: 33 (33%)

    positive association: 36 (35%)

    However, statistically speaking, either way the interesting thing seems to be that usage is pretty much evenly-spread. Without embarking on a major textual analysis across a multitude of publications, I can’t think of a more innocently democratic accumulation of instances.

    Some examples are more specialized. Do we have a relation between negative and positive? If do we have to use tech? What is the procedure that will use it?

    This article on parenting (on Boystown, pt. 71). What is positive reward? If your child likes it to the best of their ability and wants it to be, then it can be your child. Who are you? The

    Professional site internetretailer includes an article about e-commerce entitled simply ” Happy Consequences ‘.

    HiperCom.com. Global Data Synchronisation is a ‘boring subject with exciting consequences ‘, an instance where consequences are automatically so positive as to make up for initial struggle.

    A quick search yields an article in the professional journal Industrial and Commercial Training (Vol 47 #1, 2015), entitled ‘Employee empowerment: factors affecting the subsequent success or failure (Part II)’, showing that ‘consequences’ need not imply inherent positive or negative value.

    The book Transformative classroom management (Shindler, 2009)’Creating Effective Consequences Within The Social Contract’: Developing logical

    and related consequences is crucial to achieving a social contract that feels democratic and is built on promoting responsibility.

    The most successful consequences are those that are logical and related, built in proactively, reflect the buy-in and ownership of the students, and contribute to long-term growth and behaviour change.

    Who is the American historian Nathaniel Hawthorne, The

    House of Seven Gables: he then renewed the

    conversation, and made great pecuniary offers for the carpenter, in case the latter should give information leading to the discovery of the lost document, and the consequent success of the Eastern claim. 1752

    Mark Twain, A Tramp Abroad :

    But one is calm before St. Mark’s, one is calm in the cellar; for its details are masterfully ugly, no misplaced and impertinent beauties are intruded anywhere; and the consequent result is a grand harmonious whole.

    What does it mean if you’re not going to be a wise and wise man?

    • 661501 views
    • 109 answers
    • 243458 votes
  • Asked on April 11, 2021 in Meaning.

    It is quite normal to speak of positive consequences, although (see below) use of the term without context or detail can seem threatening. Does an individual understand such a concept and wish not to mention it? With context, the word itself has been used in many fields with associations of appropriate understanding or planning, resulting in positive outcomes.

    In these uses the term itself seems to be unintentional: in these uses it carries no stigma. What are consequences of your actions?

    Is it true that the term ‘as a consequence’ might often be observed in the wild in cases where someone is trying to avoid or explain a failure, perhaps with shorthand such as ‘dire consequences’ or ‘face the consequences’? You might be thinking of the open-ended declaration, “There will be consequences,’ which generally operates as a warning or even a threat. This does not make the base concept negative, any more than ‘face the music’.

    What are examples of ‘consequences’ referring to analytic concepts or positive outputs of particular actions? In relation to the Question, the important point seems to be the absence of any problematic sense at all of working against a conventionally negative association. The term appears to be neutral.

    On yourdictionary.com. org offers 101 user examples of the word “consequence” in normal use. This seems like a reasonable corpus, at least for straw poll purposes, with no inbuilt motivation to skew selection. ” In these cases he explains whether there are many examples of one’s meaning the consequence should be criticised or feared, welcomed or even reported? I went through them to determine whether these examples might in each case imply that the consequence should be questioned or feared.

    Disregarding eight examples of the slightly different usage ‘of consequence’ (although in these expressions ‘consequence’ operates consistently as a desirable quality), the remaining 93 break down as follows:

    negative Association: 32 (34%)

    neutral association: 33 (35%)

    positive association: 28 (30%)

    To be sure, in this list positive usages come out slightly lower than the other two categories (although including ‘of consequence’ would make positives the clear ‘winner’).

    If we include the examples of ‘of no/any consequence’, the figures change but still make essentially the same point:

    negative association: 32 (32%)

    neutral association: 33 (33%)

    positive association: 36 (35%)

    However, statistically speaking, either way the interesting thing seems to be that usage is pretty much evenly-spread. Without embarking on a major textual analysis across a multitude of publications, I can’t think of a more innocently democratic accumulation of instances.

    Some examples are more specialized. Do we have a relation between negative and positive? If do we have to use tech? What is the procedure that will use it?

    This article on parenting (on Boystown, pt. 71). What is positive reward? If your child likes it to the best of their ability and wants it to be, then it can be your child. Who are you? The

    Professional site internetretailer includes an article about e-commerce entitled simply ” Happy Consequences ‘.

    HiperCom.com. Global Data Synchronisation is a ‘boring subject with exciting consequences ‘, an instance where consequences are automatically so positive as to make up for initial struggle.

    A quick search yields an article in the professional journal Industrial and Commercial Training (Vol 47 #1, 2015), entitled ‘Employee empowerment: factors affecting the subsequent success or failure (Part II)’, showing that ‘consequences’ need not imply inherent positive or negative value.

    The book Transformative classroom management (Shindler, 2009)’Creating Effective Consequences Within The Social Contract’: Developing logical

    and related consequences is crucial to achieving a social contract that feels democratic and is built on promoting responsibility.

    The most successful consequences are those that are logical and related, built in proactively, reflect the buy-in and ownership of the students, and contribute to long-term growth and behaviour change.

    Who is the American historian Nathaniel Hawthorne, The

    House of Seven Gables: he then renewed the

    conversation, and made great pecuniary offers for the carpenter, in case the latter should give information leading to the discovery of the lost document, and the consequent success of the Eastern claim. 1752

    Mark Twain, A Tramp Abroad :

    But one is calm before St. Mark’s, one is calm in the cellar; for its details are masterfully ugly, no misplaced and impertinent beauties are intruded anywhere; and the consequent result is a grand harmonious whole.

    What does it mean if you’re not going to be a wise and wise man?

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  • Asked on March 13, 2021 in Meaning.

    I am pretty sure that either (a) you misheard/misread this, or (b) the speaker/writer was mistaken or joking.

    What would double-joking be best for you? What in tarnation?? is (to the best of my knowledge) a Now-Outdated Exclamation meaning something close to “What the hell? I have only ever encountered it in Western narratives, where it seems only to be used lightheartedly to mark the writer as a young boy.

    The derivation of damnation appears to be euphemistic in the first place, a derivation to ‘Domination ‘, as in’Darn it! “(((()(((((((((((((((((((((((((((())))):):)(((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((())))):))))-).).)?’?

    What is the meaning of carnabinoids? I am totally convinced that there’s no mean literal meaning for words. How its status depends on your encounter with it rather depends on.or reception.

    Edit

    Accounts in the literature about the tarnation’s common origin seem to agree. Merriam-Webster is particularly succinct on the matter, and also mentions one source in James Joyce, who was Irish by birth (and fiendishly well-read), so my broad association of this expression with the Old West might be a little narrow.

    I can find no grounds anywhere for concerning ‘carnation’ in this context as anything but a joke (by the movie’s creators) or a mistake (by either the writers, or more

    likely the transcriber).

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  • My mother could not make a single suggestion, which would sound awkward in a conventional English. In our quest to provide

    unparalleled value to our customers… Even then, ‘quest’ feels artificial.

    I can imagine going on a quest for something, or to locate something from certain place (i.e. seeing person/person/person in their cell phone). I go exploring (I go questing for an hour or two), but not exactly to deliver something. As part of our

    mission to provide unparalleled value to our customers…

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