Word: convey
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...winner of every literary prize short of the Nobel to be. If this is all just a mellow charade, it's certainly one that he has mastered, just as in this brief novel of deep feeling, his 20th, he has mastered the voice of a woman struggling to convey the things that inspired her. "This is my most 'de-masculinized' work," he says. "The willingness to relive a life--I can only imagine two women doing it. A guy would get impatient and leave...
...select and diminishing segment will never again be accepted in mainstream society—but rather we must be vigilant about the proxies through which their biases still find an outlet. The current fight is against the subtle, yet painfully consistent, message of bigotry that language and demeanor can convey. Even more insidious can be the manifestation of racism when these attitudes are recognized and tacitly accepted by those in position to prevent...
...there is something reductive about this view, fundamentally sound though it is. A photographer is always able to convey his or her personal opinion with provocative selection and framing of a snapshot’s subject—far more easily than can the author of a news story. Especially in a case like Keating’s, where the image provided anecdotal color rather than documentary evidence of news, is a photograph ever anything more than “information that is manipulated?" Brent Cunningham, managing editor of the CJR and one of the leaders of an inquiry into...
According to Leslie Bishop ’05, who was stationed at Romney’s Cambridge headquarters, the use of off-campus correspondents sought to convey to listeners the last-minute tensions experienced by intensely-watched, close campaigns...
...media, most professors say, is all too eager to give professors a platform to express their views. “Having the title ‘professor’—particularly with a prestigious university attached to it—does convey a false impression” of expertise, Thernstrom says...