Sentence examples for titles of chapters from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

The titles of chapters 2 to 5 imply a contrast between FLA and the traditional ways of analyzing texts in the four core secondary subjects respectively as follows: Chapter 2 Technicality and Reasoning in Science: Beyond Vocabulary (vs. traditional way of focusing on vocabulary when teaching science).

For example, in the titles of chapters of four recent volumes on urban studies, of Bridge and Watson (2013), Enderson and Jayne (2012), Paddison and McCann (2014), and Parker (2015), we come across metaphors as in the next Table 1, and in the texts of the volumes many more metaphors can be found.

Before the Gospel of Luke and the Gospel of John, a list of (chapters) is preserved (and one may deduce that the manuscript contained such lists for Matthew and Mark when it was in pristine condition), but their τιτλοι (titles of chapters) were apparently not placed in the upper margin of the page as in Codex Alexandrinus.

Similar(56)

Maybe I have already taken the advice in the title of chapter 4: "Read a lot, forget most of what you read, and be slow-witted".

While Professor Shiller warns of "some unfortunate incentives to sleaziness inherent in finance" (the title of Chapter 24), he also believes that new financial instruments informed by his research (and his values) can save the day.

"Panic" is the title of Chapter 4. Its central character, Martin Meurer, a former art historian, has found a job as a traveling salesman of chemicals to reinforce old stone for historical restoration projects.

The title of Chapter 2 asks, "Will Older People Be Healthy Enough to Work Longer?" The answer is a qualified yes, given the improvements in health care in the last few decades and the less physically demanding employment roles that have come with the rise of the service economy.

"Tohil's Dance" is the title of chapter 37 of the finished work.

The song "Honey and the Bee" by Owl City contains the lyrics "The crow and the beanfield", referencing the title of chapter 9.

The album, named after the title of chapter seven of Kenneth Grahame's The Wind in the Willows and featuring a kaleidoscopic cover photo taken by Vic Singh, was recorded from February to May 1967.

Live and Let Die was published in the US in January 1955 by Macmillan; there was only one major change in the book, with the title of Chapter five being changed from "Nigger Heaven" to "Seventh Avenue".

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