wordage การใช้
- The former wordage benignly suggests making positive steps toward righting the wrongs of discrimination against minorities.
- Kiner also would support wordage on Bonds'Cooperstown plaque about the use of enhancing drugs.
- The lock screen has similar wordage.
- I have to add a few words for transition sometimes, and I edit his wordage down.
- Understand that I'm not interested at all in adding fancruft, peacockery or weasel-wordage.
- I'm going to write a combined response to the above, to save time and wordage.
- The WWW is supposed to make our lives more efficient, so why such a ponderous mouthful o'wordage?
- It's a love song, with the story steeped in philosophical thoughts rather than June-moon wordage.
- The week leading up to the Super Bowl can numb any brain with the sheer amount of wordage devoted to the game.
- Despite the draconian wordage, Justice Minister Faustin Kouame insisted there were sufficient appeals methods to ensure the death penalty was not abused.
- So far the evidence presented kind of tries to hide that not one diff of this is presented, by adding lots of wordage.
- Since a fax and E-mail would only add to the gusher of incoming wordage, I refuse to let them into the house.
- I am sure there are other cases of extra wordage, this happens to be the one I noticed, more so as a disruption to reading of an article.
- Certainly, any personal attacks in there are hard to find as the density of the wordage is such that it all seems to be stream-of-consciousness drivel.
- Further, to consider purging all my contributions, the vast majority of whose wordage does not mention Cohen, also seems counterproductive to the goal of building up the Wikipedia.
- Jorgensen remembered the wordage many in the Cardinals'organization used to describe Hutchinson's analytical and almost compulsive nature in sweating over every pitch that sailed out of the strike zone.
- Speaking of Ziva's fate, Glasberg stated " Tremendous thought was put into every element of what you saw last night . . . down to the lines of dialogue, the specific wordage.
- :William Shakespeare was well-known for penning extensive and new insults ( or creatifying novelous English wordage ), though whether he actually used them in real life isn't known . my fault ! 18 : 10, 17 November 2006 ( UTC)
- #Avrahambenelizer says " The phrase " demographic miracle " was the very wordage used by the individuals in question, because they admitted nothing could explain the impossible increase of the Ashkenazi Jewish population from 50, 000 to 8 million between the 15th and 20th centuries.
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