Word: digestible
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...review periods for the three projects, University and city officials decided to postpone discussions for the master plan and art museum in order to focus on the science complex.“Basically what we said to them is this is too much for us to try to digest and absorb and give you feedback on them,” says Harvard-Allston Task Force member and Allston native Paul Berkeley.Senior Project Manager for the Boston Redevelopment Authority—the city’s agency responsible for development review—also says that the scope of Harvard?...
...indicator, the Undergraduate Council (UC) will convene an unofficial student committee that will prepare a report and get limited face time with her. These are, however, highly imperfect substitutes for open, organized communication with undergraduates. A committee would produce a less random and more productive student agenda than a digest of e-mails ever could. It would also serve as an excellent resource for a back-and-forth between students and Faust. And an official committee has many benefits that an unofficial one does not—it would likely get more time to actually talk to Faust...
...last night’s meeting, which committee member Luc Schuster described as “cordial,” was designed for the school committee to digest, rather than debate, the superintendent’s proposal...
...give our horses lots of drugs to keep them healthy, fit and pain-free. I could sell my cancerous Arabian to the slaughterhouse, and her highly medicated meat could end up on your plate. So, go ahead, enjoy your horsemeat. But just be sure that you are prepared to digest a variety of substances that are not for human consumption...
...tutorial with a world-famous practitioner or academic, this is not a bad way to get some instant information into your system." Full of cartoons and bite-size nuggets of advice, the books are aimed at people who watch TV rather than read. "They're easy to digest," says Jim Milliot, the business editor at Publishers Weekly. "They're not heavy reading...