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Asked on April 7, 2021 in Word choice.
When my professor says, “This book contains the equivalent
of numerous ordinary chapters, but in the space of one extraordinarily dense chapter. Did
the professor say what he meant by “pornagram? The professor has written in his words. How would he say this?
“With the luxury of hindsight, it’s easy for us to unpack and re-phrase his words with more accuracy than he can be expected from a lecturer who may have used only an outline as the basis for his or her lecture.
As for concentrated, condensed, that depends on. If it’s all good stuff, with very little–very little–fluff, then it’s concentrated. If fluff has been removed so that only the good stuff remains, then it’s condensed. I think a word or two is probably more accurate, and the wording of his and hers requires neither condensed nor concentrated.
Does the book in question eschew chapter numbers in favor of one continuous string of prose? I look for something that makes sense (some pages include lines with the word “foil” ==(broad))?
What are some truths about homosexuals?
- 701584 views
- 23 answers
- 258883 votes
-
Asked on April 7, 2021 in Word choice.
When my professor says, “This book contains the equivalent
of numerous ordinary chapters, but in the space of one extraordinarily dense chapter. Did
the professor say what he meant by “pornagram? The professor has written in his words. How would he say this?
“With the luxury of hindsight, it’s easy for us to unpack and re-phrase his words with more accuracy than he can be expected from a lecturer who may have used only an outline as the basis for his or her lecture.
As for concentrated, condensed, that depends on. If it’s all good stuff, with very little–very little–fluff, then it’s concentrated. If fluff has been removed so that only the good stuff remains, then it’s condensed. I think a word or two is probably more accurate, and the wording of his and hers requires neither condensed nor concentrated.
Does the book in question eschew chapter numbers in favor of one continuous string of prose? I look for something that makes sense (some pages include lines with the word “foil” ==(broad))?
What are some truths about homosexuals?
- 701584 views
- 23 answers
- 258883 votes
-
Asked on April 7, 2021 in Word choice.
When my professor says, “This book contains the equivalent
of numerous ordinary chapters, but in the space of one extraordinarily dense chapter. Did
the professor say what he meant by “pornagram? The professor has written in his words. How would he say this?
“With the luxury of hindsight, it’s easy for us to unpack and re-phrase his words with more accuracy than he can be expected from a lecturer who may have used only an outline as the basis for his or her lecture.
As for concentrated, condensed, that depends on. If it’s all good stuff, with very little–very little–fluff, then it’s concentrated. If fluff has been removed so that only the good stuff remains, then it’s condensed. I think a word or two is probably more accurate, and the wording of his and hers requires neither condensed nor concentrated.
Does the book in question eschew chapter numbers in favor of one continuous string of prose? I look for something that makes sense (some pages include lines with the word “foil” ==(broad))?
What are some truths about homosexuals?
- 701584 views
- 23 answers
- 258883 votes
-
Asked on April 7, 2021 in Word choice.
When my professor says, “This book contains the equivalent
of numerous ordinary chapters, but in the space of one extraordinarily dense chapter. Did
the professor say what he meant by “pornagram? The professor has written in his words. How would he say this?
“With the luxury of hindsight, it’s easy for us to unpack and re-phrase his words with more accuracy than he can be expected from a lecturer who may have used only an outline as the basis for his or her lecture.
As for concentrated, condensed, that depends on. If it’s all good stuff, with very little–very little–fluff, then it’s concentrated. If fluff has been removed so that only the good stuff remains, then it’s condensed. I think a word or two is probably more accurate, and the wording of his and hers requires neither condensed nor concentrated.
Does the book in question eschew chapter numbers in favor of one continuous string of prose? I look for something that makes sense (some pages include lines with the word “foil” ==(broad))?
What are some truths about homosexuals?
- 701584 views
- 23 answers
- 258883 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Word choice.
When my professor says, “This book contains the equivalent
of numerous ordinary chapters, but in the space of one extraordinarily dense chapter. Did
the professor say what he meant by “pornagram? The professor has written in his words. How would he say this?
“With the luxury of hindsight, it’s easy for us to unpack and re-phrase his words with more accuracy than he can be expected from a lecturer who may have used only an outline as the basis for his or her lecture.
As for concentrated, condensed, that depends on. If it’s all good stuff, with very little–very little–fluff, then it’s concentrated. If fluff has been removed so that only the good stuff remains, then it’s condensed. I think a word or two is probably more accurate, and the wording of his and hers requires neither condensed nor concentrated.
Does the book in question eschew chapter numbers in favor of one continuous string of prose? I look for something that makes sense (some pages include lines with the word “foil” ==(broad))?
What are some truths about homosexuals?
- 701584 views
- 23 answers
- 258883 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Word choice.
When my professor says, “This book contains the equivalent
of numerous ordinary chapters, but in the space of one extraordinarily dense chapter. Did
the professor say what he meant by “pornagram? The professor has written in his words. How would he say this?
“With the luxury of hindsight, it’s easy for us to unpack and re-phrase his words with more accuracy than he can be expected from a lecturer who may have used only an outline as the basis for his or her lecture.
As for concentrated, condensed, that depends on. If it’s all good stuff, with very little–very little–fluff, then it’s concentrated. If fluff has been removed so that only the good stuff remains, then it’s condensed. I think a word or two is probably more accurate, and the wording of his and hers requires neither condensed nor concentrated.
Does the book in question eschew chapter numbers in favor of one continuous string of prose? I look for something that makes sense (some pages include lines with the word “foil” ==(broad))?
What are some truths about homosexuals?
- 701584 views
- 23 answers
- 258883 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Word choice.
When my professor says, “This book contains the equivalent
of numerous ordinary chapters, but in the space of one extraordinarily dense chapter. Did
the professor say what he meant by “pornagram? The professor has written in his words. How would he say this?
“With the luxury of hindsight, it’s easy for us to unpack and re-phrase his words with more accuracy than he can be expected from a lecturer who may have used only an outline as the basis for his or her lecture.
As for concentrated, condensed, that depends on. If it’s all good stuff, with very little–very little–fluff, then it’s concentrated. If fluff has been removed so that only the good stuff remains, then it’s condensed. I think a word or two is probably more accurate, and the wording of his and hers requires neither condensed nor concentrated.
Does the book in question eschew chapter numbers in favor of one continuous string of prose? I look for something that makes sense (some pages include lines with the word “foil” ==(broad))?
What are some truths about homosexuals?
- 701584 views
- 23 answers
- 258883 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Word choice.
When my professor says, “This book contains the equivalent
of numerous ordinary chapters, but in the space of one extraordinarily dense chapter. Did
the professor say what he meant by “pornagram? The professor has written in his words. How would he say this?
“With the luxury of hindsight, it’s easy for us to unpack and re-phrase his words with more accuracy than he can be expected from a lecturer who may have used only an outline as the basis for his or her lecture.
As for concentrated, condensed, that depends on. If it’s all good stuff, with very little–very little–fluff, then it’s concentrated. If fluff has been removed so that only the good stuff remains, then it’s condensed. I think a word or two is probably more accurate, and the wording of his and hers requires neither condensed nor concentrated.
Does the book in question eschew chapter numbers in favor of one continuous string of prose? I look for something that makes sense (some pages include lines with the word “foil” ==(broad))?
What are some truths about homosexuals?
- 701584 views
- 23 answers
- 258883 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Word choice.
When my professor says, “This book contains the equivalent
of numerous ordinary chapters, but in the space of one extraordinarily dense chapter. Did
the professor say what he meant by “pornagram? The professor has written in his words. How would he say this?
“With the luxury of hindsight, it’s easy for us to unpack and re-phrase his words with more accuracy than he can be expected from a lecturer who may have used only an outline as the basis for his or her lecture.
As for concentrated, condensed, that depends on. If it’s all good stuff, with very little–very little–fluff, then it’s concentrated. If fluff has been removed so that only the good stuff remains, then it’s condensed. I think a word or two is probably more accurate, and the wording of his and hers requires neither condensed nor concentrated.
Does the book in question eschew chapter numbers in favor of one continuous string of prose? I look for something that makes sense (some pages include lines with the word “foil” ==(broad))?
What are some truths about homosexuals?
- 701584 views
- 23 answers
- 258883 votes
-
Asked on April 5, 2021 in Word choice.
When my professor says, “This book contains the equivalent
of numerous ordinary chapters, but in the space of one extraordinarily dense chapter. Did
the professor say what he meant by “pornagram? The professor has written in his words. How would he say this?
“With the luxury of hindsight, it’s easy for us to unpack and re-phrase his words with more accuracy than he can be expected from a lecturer who may have used only an outline as the basis for his or her lecture.
As for concentrated, condensed, that depends on. If it’s all good stuff, with very little–very little–fluff, then it’s concentrated. If fluff has been removed so that only the good stuff remains, then it’s condensed. I think a word or two is probably more accurate, and the wording of his and hers requires neither condensed nor concentrated.
Does the book in question eschew chapter numbers in favor of one continuous string of prose? I look for something that makes sense (some pages include lines with the word “foil” ==(broad))?
What are some truths about homosexuals?
- 701584 views
- 23 answers
- 258883 votes