textbookish การใช้
- More info like that seems to make it more accessible and less textbookish right off the bat.
- The best offerings range from textbookish interior design instruction to insight and examples from high-profile designers.
- I don't know if we have a specific guideline prohibiting them but they strike me as textbookish.
- Certainly the four chapters have a textbookish tone, but his interviews with hundreds of people in Texas turned up some interesting observations.
- "Textbookish " is not meant to be disparaging; the company has been producing training materials for universities, business schools and corporations for more than 10 years.
- A product spokesman says the portfolio-analysis feature is based on leading-edge investment theory, which may explain why the site is more textbookish than it should be.
- Appropriately for the Learning Channel, this 13-part expansion of a home-video version released last year is more textbookish ( and considerably less moving ) than Burns'epic.
- It's all here, un-dumbed-down, in excruciating, textbookish and sometimes bewildering detail, from well-illustrated physical postures to dissertations on nonviolence and vegetarianism.
- The next learning step could be the textbookish " Microsoft Windows 95 Complete, " by Douglas Finney and Sean Feeney, from Finney Learning Systems, for $ 39.95.
- A fascinating if textbookish survey organized by Frank Herreman, it offers a rich array of remedial objects from across Africa, from ancestor figures exemplifying human health, to convulsive masks depicting disease, to musical instruments used as diagnostic aids in divination.
- On other subjects _ the designs of houses, the artifacts that have been dug up in archaeological excavations and the development of Plimouth Plantation, today's museum of Pilgrim life _ the Deetzes'book is dry, textbookish and of interest more to scholars than to general readers.
- Godwin has been online so long he's had a celebrated law that predicts the course of online discussions named after him . " " Salon " characterized the book as, " an instructional book with an argument to convey a sort of cross between a dry, textbookish primer and a lively personal history ."