Caution! The site can't guarantee, that text has age permission. The site is not recommended, if you are less than 18 years old.
The site shows example sentences for English words. How the word or phrase could be used in a sentence?
" ... From a nonverbal perspective, leadership presence is a mixed set of signals that convey status, authority and power as well as warmth, empathy, and friendliness. Leadership presence may be enhanced by signals that make the speaker appear confident and in control and diminished by negative body language that conveys arrogance, insincerity, hyper-activity or low confidence. The latter include frowns, grimaces, whinny voice, lethargy, wooden or "practiced" gestures, loss of control, stammering, fillers "ahs" and "ums." ... "
" ... Jeff frowns upon marketers scrolling through google trends trying to catch the wave of the latest plant-based trends. “I don’t think it is going to work. The consumer is highly educated,” he says. Since the departure from Campbell Soup, Jeff is working on building the dialogue both internally and with consumers. ... "
" ... There's no Wi-Fi on the unit (as there is with Molekule's consumer devices). The FDA generally frowns upon devices generating wireless signals that are superfluous to their core function. ... "
" ... This means that once you've "tokenized" your business, an IPO or even possibly equity financing isn’t an option. If an ICO is an “initial coin offering”, shouldn’t there be follow-on coin offerings (FCOs)? As the network cap increases, it makes sense to do additional offerings. The community frowns on such a practice today, and it isn’t even possible unless you pre-plan, pre-reserve, and pre-commit a portion of tokens to all your future funding needs. This isn’t flexible and is a disadvantage compared to the traditional company equity structure, where the board of the company can decide to issue additional shares. Understanding follow-on financing is yet another one of the areas that will need to be figured out in the token economy. ... "
" ... When we smile, co-workers and clients perceive and respond to us in a more positive manner. Smiling also causes colleagues to perceive us as younger than our actual age whereas frowns make us look older. People who smile—versus frown—have lower heart rate and blood pressure and live an average of seven years longer than those who frown. If facial muscles say we’re happy, we’re more likely to experience our jobs and co-workers in a more positive light. And we’re more likely to stand out from the crowd and be chosen for special projects, promotions and pay raises. ... "