Sentence examples for on how later from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

Once we're past World War II and the narrative focuses on how later Chandlers like Norman and Otis turned the newspaper, whose quality had been an afterthought, into a world-class operation, a lot of the life goes out of the film.

These passages undoubtedly had an impact on how later generations and ages came to think about imagery.

Similar(56)

Kevin's course went through the process of each detail moment he was experiencing; how he captured it, and later on, how he combines it all into a story.

Standing at the top of the stairs overlooking the rotunda, Burridge mentions how, later on that day, there will be an open evening - the latest in a series of bridge-building exercises with the local community.

(Group B) The women also described how later on they themselves had encouraged others and become 'champions' in promoting the intervention, And then after I tell them it's really nice, come you see, it's really, really nice.

Barely two pages farther on, the same story relates how, later, Ambros, while working as a room service waiter at the Savoy in London, made the acquaintance of a lady from Shanghai, about whom, however, Aunt Fini knows only that she had a taste for brown kid gloves and that, as Ambros once noted, she marked the beginning of his Trauerlaufbahn [career in mourning].

We often find ourselves with narratives that tell us how someone gets sick, and it might be that a useful narrative is one which isolates the temporally prior variables and lets us see how later phenomena depend on them.

In order to shed new light on how the later influences decoding error and extend previous studies carried out mainly on the effect of codon usage on mistranslation [25], [35], we are investigating the effect of codon-pair context on decoding fidelity.

Depending on how one evaluates Dworkin's later views, one might regard the divergence between later Dworkin and luck egalitarian or level-playing-field equality of opportunity as either a criticism of the former or of the latter (for criticisms of Dworkin's views from opposed perspectives, see Anderson 1999; Scheffler 2003; Cohen 2004; and Fleurbaey 2008: chapters 6 10).

The reporter seems to have kept his head together, though doesn't report back on how he felt later.

David focuses on how, when Seth Meyers later joked on Late Night that he approvingly thought Cruz was talking about Global Warming, the Senator then went into his schtick that global warming is a hoax.

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