Examples of using He cites in English and their translations into Vietnamese
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
He cites,“My heart is like a detective who is the criminal's son.
Zuckerberg owns or clones most of the“8 social apps” he cites as compe….
He cites many examples, striking for those who are capable of appreciating them.
Music is a continuing feature of Son's practice and he cites sound and technology as important influences in his work.
He cites Stony Skunk and Epik High as his inspirations to pursue hiphop music.
Phoenix likes that potential for danger in his work, too, and he cites it as one of the reasons he wanted to make Joker.
He cites a Harvard Business School study done in 2012 which attributed 65 percent of startup failures to personal stress.
So far from wide application of‘death' to plants in the chapters he cites, Ross's case is based on a single plea from a pagan.
He cites studies showing that people who have animal companions also tend to have lower blood pressure, less stress….
The Social Democrat says that people's social concernsmust finally be taken seriously, and he cites high youth unemployment in the crisis-ridden countries of Southern Europe as a top priority.
In his paper, he cites studies demonstrating the method's effectiveness for a wide range of emotional problems, including.
(Reuters)- NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine has a vision forrenewed and“sustainable” human exploration of the moon, and he cites the existence of water on the lunar surface as a key to chances for success.
He cites Memorandum 329 of the American Joint Intelligence Committee from Sept. 4, 1945, just a couple of days after the end of the war.
In support of this view, he cites proverbs such as"More days, more wisdom", and"What an old man sees seated, a youth does not see standing.".
He cites a death toll which totals 94 million, not counting the“excess deaths”(decrease of the population due to lower than the expected birth rate).
He cites an eruption on Mount Tambora in 1815 that led to a“year without a summer” due to ash and volcanic material lingering in the atmosphere.
He cites Vladimir Nabokov as once suggesting“that his lessons at Cornell be recorded and played each term, freeing him for other activities.”.
He cites Amazon, Zappos, Tesla, and Pixar as successful examples of this approach as employees are“encouraged to value creative friction in everyday work.”.
In his book, he cites a 2014 study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine that said saturated fat does not appear to be associated with coronary disease risk.
He cites two miracles performed in favour of the non-Isrealites by the great prophets Elijah and Elisha in order to demonstrate that, at times, there is more faith outside of Israel.
He cites the cultural historian Thomas Berry and his perspective on the evolutionary story of the emergence of life as providing“our primary revelatory experience of the divine.”.
He cites Johnson's obituary in The New York Times, which said the 17th president's fatal flaw was"he was always headstrong,'sure he was right' even in his errors.".
He cites protective laws in France at the time that protected an estate from being split apart among heirs, thereby preserving wealth and preventing a churn of wealth such as was perceived by him in within the United States.
Thus, he cites the argument of his compatriot, the physiologist Rubner, who in 1908 established that every living being at birth is provided with a certain stock of vital forces, which must stretch for the rest of his life.
He cites an increasing incidence of democratic breakdowns, the poor performance of new democracies according to various measures of good governance and rule of law, and democratic backsliding or stagnation in the biggest and wealthiest nonWestern countries.
He cites a 1977 study by the psychologist and researcher Bernard Murstein as the first to find that quid pro quo thinking was a characteristic of ailing relationships rather than happy ones, because of its indication of a low level of trust.
He cites the 2011 book Academically Adrift, which revealed that 36 per cent of students who entered a four-year institution did not demonstrate any significant improvement in learning over the course of their degree- although the study was not limited to liberal arts institutions.