Similar(60)
But he will also forever be astute and witty, a "smart kid who doesn't try".
Sundhage's other personnel decisions have also proved to be astute.
Still, apart from an occasional speech to black colleges, he has largely avoided addressing racial issues during his term of office — a stance that some critics in the black community have described as politically craven, but which may also be politically astute.
Yet, according to a new study, this may also be an astute financial strategy: slimmer women earn more over their lifetime than their obese sisters.The study* (carried out by four female researchers at the University of Michigan) analysed data on more than 7,000 men and women born between 1931 and 1941.
On the other hand, Shay might also be an astute, saturnine politician, one who accurately gauged the climate of resentment towards Obama roiling beneath the surface of the organization, and knew the electorate would forgive a spoor of racial prejudice on the part of its leader, and might even celebrate it as "mavericky".
Horowitz calls McKinnon "the ultimate domain expert on building cloud applications" and says that he "may also be the most astute engineering manager that [he's] ever worked with".
He has also been astonishingly astute when it comes to defamation suits – to the tune of about £3m, "though most of it went to the lawyers". Galloway's houses in Portugal and south London were largely paid for by newspapers unwise enough to provoke him, and he has never lost a libel case.
But he also is an astute businessman whose extensive investments include part ownership of a bank in San Jose and another in North Carolina.
"Women, officers and ratings, will also be able to serve on the Astute class submarines from about 2016".
My wife isn't unaware of the substantive differences between these candidates, but she's astute also about some of the other key aspects of presidential debating – and I think she has a unique take on what went down between Romney and Obama last week – one that escaped me.
He was using electronic instruments as far back as the 1950s". Jarre, Burlingame said, also was known for his astute use of ethnic instruments to evoke exotic locales -- "whether it was Indian lutes in 'The Man Who Would Be King' or balalaikas in 'Dr. Zhivago' or Middle Eastern instruments in 'Jesus of Nazareth.' " The music, Jarre told The Times in 1966, "must give the film an added dimension.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com