sayers in A Sentence

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    Dorothy I Sayers.

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    Sayers ends her essay with this line:"The sole true end of education is simply this;

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    The cavity magnetron was developed in the Department of Physics by Sir John Randall, Harry Boot and James Sayers.

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    The driver told the police that Sayers took the cab to make some purchases and then returned to the pick-up location.

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    Playing the spoiled prima ballerina who was being replaced by Natalie Portman's Nina Sayers, Ryder perfectly portrayed the troubled dancer, and that hospital scene will forever be seared into our memories.

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    Dorothy Sayers, in her well-known essay"The Lost Tools of Learning," attempted to answer these questions, and in so doing gave us some very sage advice for education in our own day.

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    Sayers summarized it well,“The sole true end of education is simply this: to teach men how to learn for themselves; and whatever instruction fails to do this is effort spent in vain.”.

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    The Danger is not in the hornlike growths, says mark Sayers, associate Professor of the Department of biomechanics of the Australian University of the sunshine coast, which was curated by Shahar in this study and the second co-author.

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    Dorothy Sayers also calls this period the Poetic Age, because during this period the student is to develop the skill of organizing the information he has learned into a well reasoned format that will be both pleasing as well as logical.

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    Sayers suggests that, given details in two of the Adventures, Holmes must have been at Cambridge rather than Oxford and that"of all the Cambridge colleges, Sidney Sussex[College] perhaps offered the greatest number of advantages to a man in Holmes' position and, in default of more exact information, we may tentatively place him there.

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    Sayers suggested that, given details in two of the Adventures, Holmes must have been at Cambridge rather than Oxford and that“of all the Cambridge colleges, Sidney Sussex(College) perhaps offered the greatest number of advantages to a man in Holmes' position and, in default of more exact information, we may tentatively place him there”.

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    Author Dorothy L. Sayers suggested that, given details in two of the stories, the fictional character Sherlock Holmes must have been at Cambridge rather than Oxford and that"of all the Cambridge colleges, Sidney Sussex(College) perhaps offered the greatest number of advantages to a man in Holmes's position and, in default of more exact information, we may tentatively place him there.

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