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?
" ... But what if there was another metric we could use to check in on our health? Well, there very well could be. Say hello to sweat-based wearables, which are being worked on in labs and future-focused technology firms all over the world right now. Sweat is essentially a secretion from a bunch of glands in your skin. There is something literally coming from the insides of your body onto the outside. ... "
" ... Cool. Glad you are looking at sales as an outcome metric for your digital campaigns. You’re already better off than the advertisers that are focused on vanity metrics like impressions, traffic, and clicks. They got duped. But you should still be on the lookout for bad guys trying to trick you too, by manipulating the sales. How is that possible? Over the years, I’ve witnessed many examples of fraudsters tricking the attribution platforms to 1) claim credit for sales that would have happened anyway (organic stealing), 2) claim credit for sales that others drove (attribution stealing), and 3) make it appear that sales occurred when no sale actually occurred. They do this by tricking the affiliate platform or attribution platform using specially encoded urls. Those urls have information about the sale, the item purchased, the price paid, etc. So it appears that a sale occurred even though no sale was actually recorded in the ecommerce systems. While optimizing for sales outcomes is better than any other digital metric, be sure to challenge your own assumptions that it is immune to fraud. As long as you remain vigilant, you protect yourself and the budgets you were entrusted to invest. ... "
" ... Now, if you flip P/E upside down, you’ll get a little less-known metric called earnings yield. It’s calculated by dividing earnings per share (EPS) by market price per share. And in theory, it shows how much you earn on each dollar invested in the stock. ... "
" ... Or earnings per share (EPS), the most cited metric from earnings reports. Like P/E, the reading of this measure is based on the share count. The fewer shares there are, the better the reading. ... "
" ... “No matter what metric you look at, it was overextended (Fear & Greed Index, put skew, leverage, spot/futures basis, etc).” ... "