to the point造句

a list of articles pertinent to the duscussion; remarks that were to the point.

Refine your draft headline to make it brief, to the point, and more informative.

Back to the point, if I meet someone who's really attractive, she scores points.

We are continuing in the same policy — to make America bleed profusely to the point of bankruptcy.

Now, zzi Krystoff is much more specific -- to the point of spelling out details in the style of a disclaimer.

The fact that the link between anthrax and Iraq may have provided the 'tipping point' in moving media and public opinion to the point where Bush could attack Iraq without a firestorm of protest.

While impishly dissenting in tone, he was up-beat in spirit: hopeful, sassy, inspirational almost to the point of euphoria.

A coarse sliver of fibers is fed to an opening system which opens the sliver to the point where the fibers are individual entities.

I remember how young wannabe career politicians within the Labour party hijacked the student movement and crippled it to the point it was incapable of dissent.

Volatility helps QA managers understand if a release is stabilized to the point where it can reasonably be subjected to test.

The condemned was forced to ingest milk and honey to the point of developing severe diarrhea, and more honey would be rubbed on his body in order to attract insects to the exposed appendages.

In a more formal environment it may take several weeks of user sessions before requirements can be fully documented to the point of usefulness.

Someone with body dysmorphic disorder, BDD, exaggerates a flaw to the point of delusion, imagining a minor imperfection as a hideous disfigurement.

The child turned her eyes to the point indicated; and there lay the scarlet letter, so close upon the margin of the stream, that the gold embroidery was reflected in it.

This will help you avoid falling into the trap of contrived language that turns off the readers - sometimes to the point where they shred your MRD and feed the shreds through the shredder again!

In 1820 a "new and enlarged" account was printed, stating that the twins' gravestone was to be seen in church, though it was worn by time to the point of being unrecognizable.

Jeff: I was stung in the nether regions by a jellyfish. During" Survivor2", I peed on an electric fence and it sent a shock back to the point of origin.

to the point造句

The eye tends to follow these lines to the point where they converge.

The result was a court that is overstretched to the point of mutiny.

But he denied that they were religious to the point of fanaticism.

One of the fund's major goals is to help build the capacity government institutions to the point where they can meet the major needs of the populace.

To ameliorate this speed mismatch, modern CPUs use extensive caching (to the point where most of the transistors on a modern CPU are devoted to caching).

And his eyes widen as he thinks about advancing this technology to the point that Microsoft can emphasize the piracy issue directly to customers.

The fear of that fate would accost her husband, to the point of rendering him abstinent of the acclivity his potential had held up for him once.

I'm on the ventilator all night because when I sleep my muscles relax to the point where I'm inhaling but I'm not exhaling.

Upon hearing such a positive affirmation of his work, Colour Sgt Todd, tired to the point of breaking, had just one response: he cried.

She exaggerates the merits of a first husband who died shortly after their marriage, browbeats a second to the point that he is unfaithful, and tries to force their daughter to inform on her father.

Even with an experienced and well-disciplined team, there is still a risk that a use case may be defective to the point it impacts the ability to ultimately create a strong test case.

On Wednesday a personal trainer will work me like a farm animal for an hour, sometimes to the point that I am dizzy - an abuse for which I pay as much as I spend on groceries in a week.

We want our meals to be quick, easy, and to the point.

Seed: But what if scientists are able to improve recycling to the point that we can endlessly reuse existing materials?

Use short, succinct sentences that get to the point immediately; remember, your goal here is to dispense important information, so give that to the reader right up front.

More to the point, most Jews vote Democratic, and will probably continue to do so no matter what they think of the President's attitude towards Israel.

More threateningly, a column of ash can rise from the main crater until it cools to the point where it can no longer sustain itself, and collapses.

My take is that if it bugs your family and friends to the point that they tease you, it's probably too extreme.

But plasmas have lately fallen out of favour because of their bulk and thirst for power. More to the point, manufacturers have begun to fix many of the LCD's faults.

remarks that were very much to the point

This simple test is trivial to the point of stupidity, which is what I want.

This leads us back to the point of making your logging concise and logging enough information to trace the call through the system.

Most antibiotics directly attack the microbes that make us ill. Penicillin, for example, weakens bugs' tough outer wall to the point that many of them simply explode.

In July her cystic fibrosis progressed to the point where doctors put her on a waiting list for a double-lung transplant.

I will swallow cyanide if America ever gets to the point that we forsake the outdoors in favor of whiling away long hours lounging in corporate chain stores while... oh, Barnes & Noble.

It's really important to bring a tone of finality to the point in what you're saying, where there's a period!

One lesson here is that no species should be fished to the point where the ecosystem is unbalanced. That conclusion hardly requires the fish-fed brain of Jeeves.

According to Bela Raja, child guidance counsellor, one's parenting style, if negative, can have an adverse effect on the psyche of the child even to the point of causing damage.

This time the concierge was surprised to the point of bewilderment.

So it may be wiser to wait for the relief Wells that are being drilled to get down to the point, 4, 000 metres below the sea bed, where they will intersect the existing well.

The questions he raised during the discussion were all very much to the point.

The Banks that manage the agencies' debt issues are pulling out all the stops to ensure their success-even to the point of artificially boosting demand through deals known as "switches".

Why do we crave love so much, even to the point that we would die for it?

Sustained drought and insatiable upstream water demand have drained Lake Mead to the point that experts are predicting it may soon be shallow enough to be in deep trouble.

The source code examples do an excellent job of progressively presenting new concepts while remaining clear and to the point.