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"preface" Definitions
  1. an introduction to a book, especially one that explains the author’s aims

374 Sentences With "preface"

How to use preface in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "preface" and check conjugation/comparative form for "preface". Mastering all the usages of "preface" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Well first of all I like to preface this, I must preface this by saying, I can give you a hypothesis that is no better than anybody else's.
" The preface has its own title: "Why This Book?
You can try to spot my lisp in the preface.
I should preface by saying this wasn't my first rodeo.
In his preface to the Iran report, Army Lt. Gen.
I will preface the message that yes, I am a furry.
Let me preface this by saying I'm not a media analyst.
"We cannot step outside life's songs," he writes in the preface.
My resistance to optimism, never formidable, dissolves by the "Wonderland" preface.
The 2018 update of the study -- with a preface from Sen.
To preface, I'm not a stylist, but here's my unsolicited advice.
Now, let me preface all of this with a couple of thoughts.
Let me preface this by saying that Chad is the absolute worst.
Let me preface this review by saying I'm not a huge carnivore.
I should preface this by saying that I've tried mindfulness meditation before.
Preface each answer with the word NOTHING, and you will have something.
"The language is from the preface to an abortion bill," he said.
Let me just preface these next few sentences with: I'm sorry Dad.
I should preface this by saying: Lester Bangs is not my god.
Let me preface this by first saying that I love my roommates.
In the preface, you describe how you panicked while writing the book.
It is the sort of restaurant where the menu has a preface.
I'm going to preface everything I'm about to say with an I know.
So, with that as a preface, the Senate bill actually did precisely that.
O.J. Simpson is always referred to in the Goldman family's preface to If
I should preface this by saying I actually just started working for him.
Tube staff will now use greetings like, "Good morning, everyone," to preface announcements.
Let's preface this by saying that technology's integration with fashion is nothing new.
Jeffrey Czerewko, the Joint Chiefs' deputy director for global operations, in the preface.
The preface of Ivanka Trump's new book, "Women Who Work," is anodyne enough.
"Let me just preface this by saying I love you," Cooke says to Desorbo.
You say, in your sort of preface, you've always wanted to write a book.
"Readers…will find myths about Kafka exploded," writes Shelley Frisch in her translator's preface.
The preface hopes the book can help uncover the "nasty secrets" behind the slaughter.
"Let me just preface by saying it's one of my favorite films," Ehrin says.
Although the film begins with a preface saying otherwise, the plot is pure fiction.
I should preface this with the fact that I am terrible at ping pong.
He wrote the preface to the NLIHC's 85033 report on the cost of housing.
And Obama said it in the preface to his national security strategy of 2015.
Their friendship, as described in Hess's preface, sounds like the stuff of buddy movies.
Any hard talk gets the "You got a minute?" preface that everyone dreads. Fun!
"I haven't seen any from a lifestyle like mine," Lombard says in its preface.
A lot of people looked at the action from yesterday to preface today's action.
Lenny Cooperman, 63, an administrative law judge, asked him about immigration, but added a preface.
I'll preface this by saying that I think it was 85 minutes of music, ultimately.
The dogs preface that they, short-lived, will not see the conclusion of their masterwork.
For one thing, they can drop more references to Black culture without giving much preface.
Let me preface this by saying: Please read the instructions before you use this product.
And I'll just preface it by saying that I can't see how this would happen.
You see, she is fooled by that preface advertising Fargo as being based on fact.
I always need to preface these answers with, I'm not a trained child-eating expert.
But all that talk, with the potential for a history book preface, gets us nowhere.
When Lionel finished his first book, he thanked Diana in the preface for her assistance.
Let me preface this by saying that young Justin Bieber is my personal favorite Bieber.
The preface keys us into a factor that makes the book, in Rivkin's word, strange.
It is likely that it is unfinished, as no colophon nor preface accompany the illustrations.
In the preface, she wrote about seeing the book through to completion without her husband.
"The call record alone is stark evidence of misconduct," the preface of the report said.
Let me preface this review by saying that I have never been a dry-shampoo girl.
To preface: In a majority of states, lottery winners are legally not allowed to remain anonymous.
Kids hard at work coloring, as seen in the preface to the Little Folks Coloring Book.
" Zora Neale Hurston similarly begins her preface to Barracoon: The Story of the Last "Black Cargo.
Let me preface this by saying this piece is not intended to be hostile toward innovation.
Why did you choose to use the Kevin Hart sample as a preface into 'Count'Em Off'?
He wrote the preface for the book, saying how he likes working with [this] mature lensman.
Let me preface my criticism of this proposal by saying how much I respect Mr. Shultz.
The writer who did greatly inspire him, so editor Sheila Schwartz's Preface reveals, was James Joyce.
Yet MacCarthy's biography, from the cover and preface on, doesn't read like a product of 2019.
The preface to your latest edition addresses the problem of truth in the age of Trump.
The film's joyous performers offer an astonishing preface to Picasso's "Demoiselles," lording over the next room.
In this, he resembled Henry James, whose preface to "What Maisie Knew" he had read carefully.
The release of "Formation" two months before acted as something of a preface for the album.
JA: Let me preface by saying I think the things Bannon stands for are truly repugnant.
Of course we'd preface that with the acknowledgement that of course interest rates are still very low.
Let me preface all of this by saying that I really liked Kumail Nanjiani's new romantic comedy.
In that new preface, Sarah stresses that her original text was written from a place of optimism.
That's likely to preface a Siri speaker announcement, since it's a key feature for Google Home, too.
Let's preface this by saying that Orange Is The New Black is not that great these days.
As Christopher Tolkien writes in his preface, these two lovers were very close to his father's heart.
Fast-forward through the preface, because Candace Thaxton reads the rest of it, and she is smooooooth.
" Sontag opted for solemnity, hazarding in a preface that photography "converts the whole world into a cemetery.
I'll preface this with the fact I have my own business and work out of my house.
With fading, you temporarily set bedtime later than usual and preface it with a good bedtime routine.
He had Hus's letters published in Wittenberg, provided a preface, and wrote admiring comments in his copy.
Overview: A New Perspective by Benjamin Grant is published by Penguin Books imprint Preface on September 8.
I usually preface that sentence with "stupidly," but I know it didn't feel stupid at the time.
Let me preface this day by saying the office had a seemingly endless supply of free bagels.
I WILL CONTINUE TO TYPE IN ALL CAPS AND SOMETIMES MAY PREFACE MY NOTES WITH THIS EXPLANATION.
I should preface what I'm about to tell you by saying I was very, very, drunk that night.
TAYLOR: Well, let me preface this by saying we need a whole culture change in customer service, right?
I want to preface it and give her a chance to absorb it and see what she thinks.
""I preface this by saying that I am not religious and I do not believe in the paranormal.
As a preface to a conversation about this, get him to confirm that he's happy with your work.
A preface by Patrick Modiano, a Nobel prize-winning author, and a 30-page dossier add further context.
Keenan Trotter: To preface, I collected a bunch of questions from editorial staff members at the acquired properties.
By now, Americans have been given a grand preface into just how uncertain our immediate future will be.
The new book is described as "the first real story" of Middle-earth — a preface to The Silmarillion.
Just preface all text-based breakups with a doggie carrying an ominous wax-sealed letter in his mouth.
Mike: You don't have to preface this with "knowing nothing," by the way, as that's pretty much assumed.
Tillerson cited the preface of the nuclear deal, which calls on Iran to contribute positively to regional security.
In a self-­effacing note in his preface, he insists the compendium is the achievement of other writers.
Honda announced the discussions, which preface a potential collaboration between the two companies, via press release on Wednesday.
Let me read to you a little bit from one of the last paragraphs of the new preface.
With that preface out of the way, let's get down to business — the business of your gastrointestinal tract.
I think I should preface this Money Diary by stating that I suffer from anxiety and chronic depression.
Before I get too far, I'd like to preface this account by saying that I am a spiritual novice.
Let me preface by saying that when I first began using it, I had no problem with the scent.
In the preface, you talk about how the election of Trump was a huge moment in writing this book.
Uh, I have to preface this by saying I decided to come up with a theme for my answers.
"You don't have to worry," he says during a filmed preface, using his own version of the BalletBoyz approach.
Q: In both your preface and conclusion, you talk about how mental illness has always been stigmatized throughout history.
She hasn't learned how to preface her stories because of how she thinks people will take them or not.
She wrote the preface to and is coauthor of the book, America's Moment: Creating Opportunity in the Connected Age.
I should preface this "consumer tech" post by saying I generally do not give a shit about consumer tech.
At a pre-Thanksgiving briefing, she requested that reporters preface their queries by saying what they were thankful for.
Too often, we take for granted what their preface calls the "thin and lovely membrane" that is our biosphere.
Allow me, if I may, to preface this news story by telling you a little bit about Werner Herzog.
Let me preface this by saying that I realize — or at least I hope — that this is a joke.
As Ms. Loite points out in her preface to the book, he was reluctant to call himself a photographer.
"For most, the world is no longer a very nice place to be," Zelman writes in the book's preface.
In the preface to her latest work, "Of Morsels and Marvels," she conveys her surprise at his negative response.
I'm going to preface that, that it's not your fault, that it's not your fault but now it's your responsibility.
The edition comes with an excellent preface from Watchmen author Alan Moore and with some stunning art from Dan Hillier.
"What I wrote was exactly what tens of thousands of readers needed at that moment," writes Baoshu in his preface.
Hitler himself was a fan of May and his fictional Apache chief Winnetou (Harris mentions this in her book's preface).
"I like to preface these things by saying it's not about beauty, it's an opportunity to experiment," she assures me.
"Employment creation is at the heart of the next Jubilee administration's priorities," he wrote in a preface to the manifesto.
The authors spent many hours interviewing Kissinger, and he has written a short preface blessing their analysis as a whole.
In this case, though, I think I would have come around to the artist's way of thinking without his preface.
Arthur and Barbara Gelb spent their lives "obsessively and permanently entangled with the tormented, enigmatic O'Neill," according to the preface.
I want to preface this by saying that for the last quarter century I have not been a watch person.
Let me preface this by saying: I realize that I'm not necessarily the target user for the original Nintendo Switch.
Let me preface this by saying that, to my preteen dismay, I never had a RAZR to call my own.
ISSA: And I&aposll preface it by saying this for context, Ms. Page said, not ever going to become president, right?
And the thing is, I think Breitbart — and let me preface this by saying I take responsibility for all my actions.
"I don't disown a single line in it, not a word," Mr. Matzneff wrote in a preface to the 2005 edition.
I should preface my review of Fitbit's newest smartwatch, Fitbit Versa, by clarifying that I've never been the target smartwatch consumer.
Saeed tells me the Tijuana story -- which appears in the preface of his book -- toward the end of our long conversation.
An excerpt from the preface of "Liberalism", 2nd edition: To shore up a weakened building, you need to understand its foundations.
You define efficiency in the book's preface as being able to produce goods or providing service with a minimum of waste.
The first daughter wrote her guide before the November 2016 election, updating with a brief preface during the presidential transition time.
Meishi Smile: To preface, a MAD is a popular form of fan made media on Japan's Nico Nico Douga video site.
This time around, I'm going to ask for patience as I preface the effort with a short auto-industry history lesson.
He had to preface his tweets about Russia Wednesday morning with a disclaimer that his White House was not in chaos.
Certainly, but let me preface this by saying that, although I don't disbelieve in the paranormal, I also don't totally believe.
In a candid preface, Ball explains that he wrote "Census" in memory of his brother, Abram Ball, who had Down syndrome.
Vital," is how the poet Gwendolyn Brooks began her lyrical preface to Etheridge Knight's first pamphlet of poems, "Poems From Prison.
I should probably preface this by saying that I've always found Saturday Night Live to be a little hard to take.
The phrase "boots on the ground" was often used by the hosts to preface any gossip they'd heard about the Housewives.
In the preface to the first volume, published in 21992, under the title " Reborn ," Rieff confesses his uncertainty about the project.
"I have tried not to preach or even teach," Shorto writes in the preface — and it proves a decidedly refreshing approach.
I'll preface it with this, I work with a lot of bands, a lot of them are kind of pieces of shit.
Faber & Faber also sent out the Publisher's Preface and Appendix to 2023: A Trilogy today, but they did not contain any answers.
According to Susan Stryker in the preface, a film is supposedly on the way to tell the story of his extraordinary life.
To preface, I first met most of the members of Primal Rite (sans Lucy) when I was living in Chicago in 2015.
Half of all CEOs are women, and the gender preface for many common job titles has been dropped from most people's vocabulary.
But as Henning Schoenenberger writes in the preface, we have to begin somewhere, and this is as good a place as any.
If you're at all interested in scientific publishing or natural language processing, the preface by the authors is well worth a read.
"A revolution in communication is raging around the world, and it's called the Internet," author Patrick Vincent explains in the book's preface.
I want to preface this by saying this is a child's memory of the past; this is honestly how I remember it.
I did the preface, but I spent the whole time trying to hide my lisp and getting scared about pronouncing Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
" The preface reads, "Most approaches to childhood anxiety leave parents out … that's a big mistake … this book puts parenting at the center.
For its demolition by many historians, see the preface to the new (2013) edition of my "Tolerant Populists" (originally published in 1963).
It's one reason Biden's entry in the race is a watershed moment — and one many think will preface a more negative campaign.
Or to preface his usual finale of titanic tulle gowns with a trio of silk dresses that were sumptuous in their simplicity.
"You'll have to decipher what's going on, as it happens," Notley writes in the preface, which offers direction, but only so much.
" Ms. Hillauer notes in the preface that the book started with an investigation into the question "Arab women filmmakers — do they exist?
" The New York Times was even stronger, instructing its writers to put the phrase in quotes or preface it with "so-called.
In a preface to the report, the president of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops acknowledged the church has more work to do.
I want to preface this conversation by saying I apologize for probably following you a thousand times in the last year or so.
In his 59th year, he had a one-man exhibition to which he contributed a biting preface that opens: Why do you paint?
Each section is introduced with an illustration, which I presume were done by Dochney, though the preface credits them to Leonardo da Vinci.
I should preface my remarks by saying: any running back who ever played a single down in the NFL is a good athlete.
In 2003, she curated a festival of Palestinian films at Columbia University, which resulted in a book with a preface by Edward Said.
In a preface to the 2012 edition of her book, Professor Mahmood described both the praise and criticism she had received from feminists.
And they certainly don't ... Coming from someone who's not going to preface it by saying how sorry they are to have the opinion.
"Discussion of ingredients has required revisions," he wrote in the preface to the second edition of "The Fine Art of Italian Cooking" (1990).
Meyers is a central character in the book who alters the course of Tortorella's life from the preface to the very last chapter.
In their preface, the translators say that the obscenity is intended to give readers a "frisson" such as the original might have elicited.
Let me just preface this with Kara, your reporting is making me sweat this whole time, so I have to step up my game.
The preface to a chunky government green paper suggested that ominous changes were afoot: Mrs May wrote of a "new, active role" for government.
Probably the greatest revelation of the evening was that folks in South Carolina like to ask long, slow questions, often with an elaborate preface.
The three framed photos, collectively titled "Untitled (Preface)" (2019), introduce the exhibition, illuminating the perennial yet impossible desire to derive knowledge from photographic images.
ESSAYS ONEBy Lydia Davis In the preface to this ample assembly of her essays, Lydia Davis offers a modest account of the book's origin.
And I will also preface this by saying, when I took the role of CEO, I had already started the search for a CEO.
Books of The Times A bit of advice before reading Peter D. Kramer's timely book, "Ordinarily Well: The Case for Antidepressants": Skip the preface.
Charles de Gaulle, Julian Jackson insists in the preface of his new biography, " De Gaulle " (Harvard), is "everywhere" in modern France , its undisputed hero.
And, of course, we also claimed this in the preface of the fifth edition, but we're currently working hard to finish the sixth edition.
Before we get into it, I just want to preface this by saying I'm glad you're taking some time to discuss this serious subject.
If this was a bittersweet moment for fans — an abrupt, tantalizing preface to the next "Star Wars" sequel, "The Last Jedi," which opens Dec.
IN HIS PREFACE to this compact, savage satire, the exiled novelist Ma Jian condemns "the false utopias that have enslaved and infantilised China since 1949".
That being said, we'll preface this slideshow with a friendly warning: It's hard to resist the newness ahead — especially if you love all things glowy.
Preface it with something like, "I have a personal question I would like to ask you...", the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services suggests.
I should preface this review by saying that while I have a 4K TV, it is from the lower, less costly end of LG's spectrum.
Even games like Street Fighter, which most in the room can likely play blindfolded, require a quick preface regarding precisely how the title is played.
"Strong: "I will preface this by saying I kind of stay away from all of that [online], but I'm aware that ['Succession'] penetrated the zeitgeist.
First, I want to preface this by saying that when I took this photo, I didn't realize how much of a prego pose this was.
Preface everything with a little "is," a little name-and-handle update of what we're doing, when we were all still friends with MySpace Tom.
In the preface to "On Combat," Colonel Grossman wrote that he spends nearly 300 days a year traveling the country evangelizing the sheepdog mind-set.
Grant's preface alludes to the fact that he wrote as he was dying cruelly of throat cancer, after a swindler had bankrupted and humiliated him.
In his preface, Rothstein writes that America has a constitutional obligation to remedy de jure segregation in housing, and that its story must be told.
"My first response was an adamant refusal," Hess writes in a preface to "The Painted Queen," new at No. 7 on the hardcover fiction list.
In a preface of the book, Michelle Alexander, a civil rights advocate, describes Burton as a 21st-century Harriet Tubman, and there's something to that.
"I have always wanted to tell my story," the artist wrote in the preface to her memoir, We Flew Over the Bridge, published in 1995.
But its writers, Adam Forman and Matt A.V. Chaban, preface their solution with a highly informative neighborhood-by-neighborhood breakdown of where artists live now.
The dancing syllables of that "Preface" are unlike anyone else's, and while they may not exactly say what they mean, they certainly mean what they say.
He drew the comparisons based on Clinton's college thesis, which was about Saul Alinsky, who once wrote a book with a preface that -- Oh, never mind.
Let me preface this by saying that I understand that this is a really dumb thing, in the grand scheme of things, to be upset over.
The media has interpreted everything Ryan's done recently—New York fundraising, stepped-up messaging, Donald Trump scolding—as preface to a bid for the presidential nomination.
"We have not done nearly enough to prevent or prepare for such potential pandemics," the commission's chair, Peter Sands, wrote in the preface to the report.
I first encountered it, with the Martian setting, in the preface to the essay collection 'The Mind's I' (1981), edited by Douglas Hofstadter and Daniel Dennett.
His words preface photo essays from six photographers who have documented journeys to different parts of the world, including Ethiopia, Albania, Australia, Finland, Peru and Spain.
And that word from her preface, "ignite": It works like an invitation to the reader, a little suggestion that you, too, could burn with Morrison's fire.
Lauren McGoodwin, the founder and CEO of Career Contessa says many of us — both men and women — unconsciously use "sorry" as a preface for a request.
" Crosby recalls her partner reading Middlemarch aloud to her in the hospital, how she quipped at Janet, "Of course you have to start with the preface!
In the preface to his most recent book, "Crippled America," Donald Trump tells it like he says it is: "I'm a really nice guy, believe me."
A preface here, I realize the broken experiment run amok that is 4Chan is chock full of keyboard-hunching virgins who have morphed into despicable monsters.
Omagari follows Muroga's forward with a preface that ups the ante, focusing on the 8×8-pixel plane, which he poetically likens to an infinity symbol.
In a preface commissioned by Mr. Richards, Hilton Als, a writer for The New Yorker, remarks on the "Breakfast at Tiffany's" flavor of Mr. Cunningham's reminiscences.
While Ball accomplishes the stated goal of his preface, bringing the son with Down syndrome to life, the census itself leaves a little to be desired.
In its Friday edition, which came out Thursday, L'Osservatore Romano published a preface written by the pope for a Spanish-language book on Francis and women.
Let me preface this section by saying my expectations for Aaron Gordon are borderline irrational, and have been that way ever since he entered the league.
Take LA-based upstart Vincent—his track "Her" uses melodic trap snares and periodic choral chanting to preface the Flume-atizing of the song's various climaxes.
Those predisposed to epileptic fits should be advised: "the video has been identified to potentially trigger seizures for people with photosensitive epilepsy," the clip's preface warns.
In the preface to her autobiography, Ms. Dunnigan wrote of the crucial role that the black press had played in documenting the struggle for civil rights.
As he put it in the preface to "Lonely Hearts": "Science, inching along by trial-and-error and by doubt, is a graveyard of final answers."
The ones placed by the Biennial's curators, Christopher Y. Lew and Mia Locks, preface an unfolding saga in which, willy-nilly, all of us are characters.
As a preface, I will say that I find the politics of bullying our southern neighbor and the racism unleashed by the whole wall narrative repugnant.
The title story, however, seems to have been included in the hopes that, in the absence of a preface, it might explain the collection's unifying theme.
"The footprint of books is everywhere in history, and their visual depiction is — quietly but insistently — everywhere in art," Camplin and Ranaura write in the preface.
But if you turn it to the preface, you might be shocked to find one of the most enthralling stories this side of Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger.
I'll preface it with a bunch of backstory and explain what I had left behind, which made me more unhappy about the culture I had come into.
But all of this is only a preface for the explosion of colors, costumes and folkloric dance that will overtake the city in its annual Carnaval celebration.
Zwagerman, a prolific writer who committed suicide in 2015, says in the preface that the writers he selects share one aim: "To give a voice to madness".
This is unacceptable and the president ought to preface that the safeguard of U.S. national security will be the foundation upon which any further trade negotiations rest.
The book became a collector's item; now a 50th-anniversary edition has been published with the help of the Prices' daughter, Victoria, who has written the preface.
It's important to preface that the changes we've tracked at the RISD Museum are the product of many ongoing efforts from within and outward from the institution.
Also beloved of campus activists are trigger warnings, when instructors preface potentially upsetting texts, such as a novel with a rape scene, with a note of caution.
And just as a preface to this, I was reading through Univision's S2135 filing and one of the enumerated risks of a public offering was union activity.
"I should also preface the whole thing by saying that to me when I make an album I absolutely love it while I'm making it," he adds.
All of Ford's work is preface to its plan to launch autonomous vehicles in a commercial setting in 2021, beginning with an self-driving ride-hailing fleet.
This natural conversation feature is called context carryover; as long as you preface your first question with "Alexa," you won't have to with your follow-up inquiry.
For children 2 and older, preface the trip with a chat about the (potentially overwhelming) sensory experiences related to airplane travel so they know what to expect.
Secondly, I should preface this by saying that I have very thick hair due to my mixed Asian ethnicity, and thus demand a lot from my conditioner.
I have to preface this by saying that pointed-toe flats have never been my friend, so it's no surprise that these weren't a perfect fit either.
Daimler hopes customers already used to voice assistants won't miss Siri or Alexa when they climb aboard and must remember to preface requests with "hey Mercedes" instead.
"I didn't really get pop music at that age," writes Neil Gaiman in the preface, recalling how he randomly became acquainted with Bowie's songs at age 11.
Let me preface this by saying I had long anticipated the day I would marry the love of my life and willingly absorb myself into his identity.
No, now they're worse than ... They're not worse than drug dealers, let me preface that, but they have a reputation that is not going so well. Yeah.
The sculpture's Latin title, "Sursum corda," commonly translated as "Lift up your hearts," is the priest's invocation in the Preface to the Eucharist in the Catholic Mass.
It was, nevertheless, the preface to a showing of midlength corduroy skirts, simple sweaters, boxy car coats and an appealingly high-waisted and high-watered new jeans style.
It's interesting to me because often it's the expectation that even if you support Hillary Clinton, you're supposed to preface your support by saying, Well, she's not perfect.
In her preface to the 1995 edition of Life Is With People, ethnographer and cultural critic Barbara Kirschenblatt-Gimblett cautions us about the book's assumptions and its pitfalls.
But the executives offered limited new details, prompting Barclays' analyst Ross Sandler near the end to preface a question by saying he was just beating a dead horse.
The novel opens with a preface describing his real-life fate — found apparently burned to death in his house, earlier seized from a white farmer during land reforms.
The plan was to collect the poems in an album, and at some point in the hard-drinking day, Wang Xizhi decided to provide a preface for it.
The Harvard historian Philip A. Kuhn cited these as questions worth exploring in his preface to the Chinese translation of a book he wrote about 18th-century China.
So as a preface to the rapidly approaching fall TV season, I asked Joe to join me for the latest episode of my podcast, I Think You're Interesting.
In the preface, we learn that Rivkin's interest in Twombly began a decade ago in Houston, when he was leading school groups on tours of the Menil Collection.
We realize that after the preface it becomes the Middle Ages that Greenblatt presents as gripped with anxiety about death, living in obsessive fear, an ignorant, superstitious fear.
In his preface, Amis notes that "political prophecies" tend "to be instantly dismayed by events," and he can hardly be faulted for underestimating Corbyn as an electoral force.
It's a similar point to the one that Mr. Miller made in his preface, but this time around, instead of welling up, I nodded my head a lot.
"The King" doesn't preface the battle with the St. Crispin's Day speech — "we happy few, we band of brothers" — one of Shakespeare's most soaring and frequently bastardized orations.
You need not read the 40-page preface to see how Shaw's diagnosis of Heartbreak House — his name for "cultured, leisured Europe before the war" — applies unchanged today.
It got to the point where Mr. Carroll even wrote his own answer to the riddle for the preface to the 1896 edition, just to stop the complaining.
So, I should preface this by saying, for most of the week, I help run a public mental health clinic, and then I also have two private practices.
The phrase "the best and the brightest" is frequently misused, "failing to carry the tone or irony that the original intended," Mr. Halberstam said in a 1992 preface.
Mrs. Till-Mobley would have welcomed an artist's rendering of her son as preface to a counternarrative and a challenge to the rest of us to step up.
"Divination is a sin," she was always saying — as a warning, as an explanation for her bad luck, and as a preface to all the stories about her father.
In the preface, they write that back in the fall of 2016, they thought they'd be dealing with issues like interminable lines at the polls and evaluating new technology.
CherriesGo old-school and preface your foreplay by challenging your partner to the classic kissing test: See who can tie a cherry stem in a knot with their tongue.
In the new book's preface, Callow puckishly notes that friends commiserated with him over the "terrible decline" in Welles's fortunes he'd be depressingly obliged to record from then on.
"Preface to the Poems Composed at the Orchid Pavilion" became the most widely emulated work of calligraphy in Chinese history, the model for a new standard of expressive writing.
Just how painstaking that work was is evident from Anne Bell's preface to the first volume, where she wrote of untangling the quirks of Woolf's dates, abbreviations and more.
The killing of a woman is "a lethal act on a continuum of gender-based discrimination and abuse," Yury Fedotov, the agency's executive director, wrote in the report's preface.
In 2000, writing a new preface for a reissue of her autobiography, she noted that young people would often ask her how she "controls" her interviews with notable figures.
All the while, Kohler reflects on that life in a series of digressions as he struggles to write the preface to his magnum opus, a study of Nazi Germany.
I always like to preface my reentry experience by stating that I never want my experience and my story to be the story that is used as the rule.
So, to Sonny Weems, I preface: you are a 29-year-old international basketball star, self-made in all the most meaningful ways, and I respect that shit extremely.
But the authors, along with many other of the papers from the past, preface their work by stating that what they found has no claim on the validity of religion.
Macs are notoriously hard to upgrade, and that's by design I should preface this by saying I bought the Mac mini fully knowing it was not a very powerful machine.
As the first song and single, "That's The Way Love Goes" is a preface on what it would be like to be Janet's lover, loaded with imagery and double entendres.
Dr. Crosby had found no takers among mainstream publishers In the preface to "The Columbian Exchange," Professor Crosby addressed his interdisciplinary method and what may be considered his scholarly legacy.
The book includes a preface by David Hockney, a friend and fellow student of Kitaj's, in which he condemns the "vicious [and] appalling" attacks leveled at the artist by critics.
I should also preface this by saying that Saturday Night Live's satire of political figures is almost always limited to a couple of very high-level, obvious things to mock.
"Well, let me preface it by saying I think Nikki Haley may end up as our first female president," replied Peters, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant colonel and Fox contributor.
Moma 's revision of its master narrative should trigger no end of conversations about issues of the century past and how they preface, or fail to, our anxiety-prone times.
"These effects include addiction, priming for use of other addictive substances, reduced impulse control, deficits in attention and cognition, and mood disorders," he said in a preface to the report.
"It's embarrassing to walk around in your monetary underwear in front of thousands of people," he wrote a few years ago, as a preface to one of these self-audits.
" Ridgway wrote in his 1912 preface that "the nomenclature of colors remains vague and, for practical purposes, meaningless, thereby seriously impeding progress in almost every branch of industry and research.
His black-and-white sketches illustrate a collection of stray thoughts — "snippets of adventure, random memories, maxims, ghosts, forgotten heroes, trees, the raging sea," as he explains in his preface.
The preface to the catalogue of the original show, authored by the three curators, states: 'A New Spirit in Painting' is an exhibition of the work of thirty-eight painters.
"Girl" or equivalent is a repeatedly invoked as needless preface – girl band, female-fronted, lady drummer – the epithet cruelly reductive and signifying the presumed anomaly of a woman playing music.
I would like to preface this by saying how much I enjoy the false sense of security Steps lulled us all into by naming their comeback album Tears on the Dancefloor.
Each volume, with its own editor, included a preface by Professor Barnet surveying Shakespeare's life, work and stagecraft, followed by an introduction to the work at hand by an eminent scholar.
Regardless, Eugene's capture does preface Negan's return to the Sanctuary, where he retakes command from Simon and, in an extremely tense exchange, lets him live despite his obvious and flagrant disobedience.
"Use what is local, use what is available, and use ingredients to their fullest potential," she wrote in the preface to "Dolce Italiano: Desserts From the Babbo Kitchen," published in 2007.
Let me preface this by saying I love Britney Spears more than I love some of my own family members and I wish her nothing but success and joy. However. However.
"A wise poet once said that the universe is made up of stories not atoms," editor Orijit Sen wrote in the preface of the book, the first of a planned series.
Meanwhile, Morice, without Gauguin's authorization, manipulated his version of the unillustrated text – adding a preface, the chapter Songeries and his own poems – and published this version of Noa Noa in 1901.
" Although I was listening to "What Can the President Do," that episode that you replayed, and I think you sort of preface it by saying, "This might give you some comfort.
Let me preface this by saying I went into this experiment with some pretty weird, not particularly sustainable, grocery shopping habits — at least for a someone who lives in New York.
I should preface it by saying that my family was always very supportive in the sense that, when the time is right we feel like we want to invite outside expertise.
"One day President Roosevelt told me that he was asking publicly for suggestions about what the war should be called," Churchill wrote in the preface to the first installment in 21861.
The title of the show was lifted from the preface of the 1997 reprint — not 1972, as the press release incorrectly states — of Lucy Lippard's Six Years (originally published in 1973).
"Of all possible models and configurations — with endless possibilities for constructing diagrams and charts — why is the circular layout such an exceptionally popular choice for depicting information?" asks Lima his preface.
I will confess that Mr. Miller's incantatory and gorgeous preface — a discussion of why disappointment is not an obstacle to transcendence, but rather, its aim — caused me to well with tears.
Bokhary's remarks figure in a brief preface to the 2020 edition of the leading work on Hong Kong's criminal law and practice, a 2,081-page volume known as Archbold Hong Kong.
But that call "was neither the start nor the end of President Trump's efforts to bend U.S. foreign policy for his personal gain," Schiff wrote in the preface of the report.
"The policy of this administration is to engage with other governments, regardless of their record, if doing so will further US interests," Secretary of State Mike Pompeo states in the preface.
To watch it now is essentially to have to preface the viewing with an hour-long lecture on why Roots matters and the cut-corners realities of late '70s TV production.
And obviously guns are often what he uses but I was very keen... And here's the thing I should preface all of this with: I finished writing the show a year ago.
We've obviously ... Let me just preface this for people, we've been writing about the sexual harassment issues, the sexism issues, their lawsuit with Alphabet, Waymo, behavioral problems, regulatory problems and now this.
In 2005, in my preface to the Home Works 3 catalogue, I had written: 'At this point, the Home Works Forum has (we think) settled into a regular schedule of regular disruption.
If I identify a project that requires intense concentration — like working on a business plan — I don't schedule it on my first day but preface it with walks, personal writing, or reading.
To preface this, I must say that these are people I admire so fucking much and that is why I feel the "gosh I wish I had that or was that" bug.
Her preface is a diatribe against the poverty of intellectual debate in America, and anyone wedded unquestioningly to a creed—whether Marxism, capitalism, Freudianism or Christianity—will read this book with discomfort.
I'm tempted to preface this Q&A with a caveat that the teen is ridiculously wise beyond her years, but Smith made it clear that's a phrase she's not particularly fond of.
"Given that it is unclear that Kavanaugh did a thing, the defamation that he has suffered at the hands of the media is a disgrace," he wrote in the newly added preface.
"Rarely in the history of the United States has the nation been so ill-served as during the presidency of George W. Bush," Smith writes in the first sentence of the preface.
But I should preface this by saying, back in the '90s, when I first started worrying about the password problem, which is that we're asking people to do things that are impossible.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads DETROIT — Perhaps I should preface my discussion of Homage: Regular Folk with a brief declaration of my own sentiments regarding the energetic qualities of inanimate objects.
Richard Dawkins, in the preface to his landmark 1976 book,"The Selfish Gene," paid tribute to Hamilton and the three other "dominant figures" in social biology whose ideas formed the book's foundation.
There is a preface by Ira Glass (who has collaborated with Ware on storytelling projects for the New Yorker and This American Life), and two introductions by Françoise Mouly and Art Spiegelman.
In the preface to style photographer Bill Cunningham's memoir, "Fashion Climbing," Hilton Als writes that Cunningham took delight in the "possibility of you"; all the things that fashion could let you be.
In her preface to the catalogue, Adler also divulges that Gibson's 2015 heavy-bag piece "A Very Easy Death" — which the Wellin acquired in 2016 — gave her the idea for the exhibition.
In 2010, in a new preface to "Petrostate," following an economic slump, he wrote that the decline in oil prices had prompted his wife to suggest that the book's title was misleading.
But Mr. Liu's handwritten preface also reflected his passion for art, literature and ideas, a side of him that became obscured in the focus on his political activism and his Nobel Prize.
"If you have to preface your criticism of Lizzo with, "it's not because she's fat and Black," chances are you feel small type of way about fat Black women," one tweet read.
The design is excellent, the content is great (an introduction by Art Spiegelman and preface by Ira Glass are nice touches), and you'll realize how much of Ware's style has permeated our culture.
"My instant reaction is that this sounds like the preface for a vindictive moment," Stephens said, saying that it was reminiscent of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's response to an unsuccessful 2016 coup.
These aren't likely to go up for sale before 2020, at the earliest, but that could be just in time to preface the autonomous driving revolution on the other side of the equation.
Sarah has long planned to publish an updated and expanded second edition, but in this particular moment, I am pleased that she's allowed us to publish this interim edition with a new preface.
In the preface to his and Richer's book of hysteric poses, Charcot draws a line St. Catherine of Sienna to his era's hysterics, trying to create a so-called "universal" theory of hysteria.
Brian Sims (D), who represents Philadelphia and is the state's first openly gay legislator, posted the photo on Facebook with a preface of "OFFICIAL WELCOME" ahead of Pence's Tuesday visit to the city.
I asked you to write the preface to the publication I just released via 8 Ball Zines, and we've had a bunch of conversations about the project—where it's going, where it's been.
The paper and patent represent a big advancement in battery tech and are undoubtedly a preface to the actual million-mile battery composition that will land itself in Teslas in the coming years.
Angel Gurria, the secretary-general of the OECD, said in the latest report's preface that the performance of the four Chinese regions was impressive, as their income levels were below the OECD average.
Ursula Andkjær Olsen's Third-Millennium Heart is a beautiful monster of a book coming at you straight, with no padding of preface or foreword to warn you what you might be in for.
We should preface this by saying that these software updates are very much works-in-progress—they're by no means finished and are likely to gain and lose features over the next few months.
" Asked what he personally gets out of the project, Musk said, "First of all, I should preface this by saying... what I would ask is that... this is a difficult thing that we're doing.
As EIA itself has said many times (often buried an a preface or a footnote), people should try to understand these projections and the assumptions that inform them; they shouldn't take projections as predictions.
"I'd like to preface all of it by saying I've met PewDiePie... in my very best judgment I don't think the guy has a hateful bone in his body," Neistat says in the video.
OK, we know that for some meat- and cheese-obsessed people (and we know quite a few of those), the word "vegan" can stoke skepticism when it comes as a preface to certain dishes.
Unifying the app layer of both iOS and macOS could also preface a move some anticipate Apple making down the road – building its own ARM-based chips for powering its notebook and desktop computers.
In the preface to his new book, Identity: The Demand for Dignity and the Politics of Resentment, he returns once again to the controversy he started and tries to defend himself against (unnamed) critics.
In his preface, Rawlins explains that the book is meant to serve as a kind of blueprint—"a strategic framework to change our country's political, social, and economic landscape" over the next half-century.
In 1952, Henri Cartier-Bresson published a book whose English-language title was "The Decisive Moment," a phrase the French photo journalist pulled from a 17th-century memoirist's remark and quoted in his preface.
"Cluster munitions pose significant dangers to civilians for two principal reasons: their impact at the time of use and their deadly legacy," the Cluster Munition Coalition said in the preface to its 2017 report.
The new book attempts to distill the story of their relationship from the volumes of "The History of Middle-earth" where, as Christopher Tolkien remarks in the preface, it can be difficult to follow.
It was that moment, among other incidents, when Mr. Trump "became the author of his own impeachment inquiry," Representative Adam Schiff, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, wrote in the report's preface. 3.
As the translators observe in their preface, one can faintly discern a plot: in a ruined city, a Hero poet prepares to overcome his Hamlet-like stasis and bring about the salvation of humanity.
"Everyone is under starter's orders including multinational organizations and their worldwide supply base" to implement the Paris agreement, Christiana Figueres, head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, wrote in a preface to Tuesday's report.
For Percoli and Astier de Villatte, another intriguing bit of Balthus lore is "Mitsou," the book the artist made at age 11 about his cat (with a preface by the poet Rainer Maria Rilke).
But it was like, I had to preface the podcast next time because he got a lot of hate, and I was like look, you people don't understand, we will end this podcast today.
Let me preface this by saying that I am a fan of Netflix originals — Stranger Things, The Crown, Grace & Frankie, you name it — as well as non-Netflix movies and shows classified as science-fiction.
As Sandra Zalman suggests in her preface to this book, that show must have impressed some of the young artists of the day, among them Jasper Johns, whose first flag painting was begun that year.
Geely's concept (called Preface) isn't its first sedan, or even its first all-electric one, but it's the first one that will be built on the "Compact Modular Architecture" that Geely co-developed with Volvo.
Ninth Circuit Federal Judge Alex Kozinski, one of the more vocal critics, suggested in the preface to last summer's  Georgetown Law Journal's Annual Review of Criminal Procedure that he felt hamstrung by strict federal guidelines.
"It is to these areas that I have long been drawn, lingering there to meditate on a quality of light, space and weather," Mr. Staller wrote in the preface to his book, published in 1988.
"You'll need to pick up some Rolled Chicken Tacos, so head to Taco Bell and grab a Rolled Chicken Taco Party Pack featuring six Rolled Chicken Tacos and six Crunchy Tacos," says the recipe's preface.
Lynx is Alexa-enabled, so if you preface your command with "Hello, Lynx," it can do everything the Echo Dot ($49.99) can, but embellished with the gestures of a flight attendant demonstrating in-flight safety.
The forthcoming collector's item was authored by production designer Deborah Riley, and features an "exclusive foreword" from "Game of Thrones" showrunners David Benioff and D. B. Weiss, and a preface from production designer Gemma Jackson.
"Reading between the lines of the IRS future state vision, the IRS appears to replace traditional IRS employee-to-taxpayer interaction with online and third-party interactions," Olson said in the preface to the report.
His "there is no one, not even the wind" comes directly from his experience of the "space and solitude, the stillness and light of the desert," as he writes in a preface to the work.
It's a question that has haunted the curators, as well: "Is the work that remains more accurately considered artifact than art, carrying little of its original power?" they ask in their preface to the catalogue.
In the preface to one of his books, Mr. Huang writes about his early years in China, where he says he was sent to Yunnan Province for "re-education" as a teenager in the 1970s.
Now let me just preface by saying, I worked for the Style section in the Washington Post when I was in my early 20s and that was sort of the heyday of profiles like this.
Well, just the preface that there's a huge community and ecosystem of blogs that cover Apple, and it's really hard to determine motivation on that gargantuan company, but I think there are a couple stories here.
It is customary to preface plot details with a spoiler alert, but Chaguan (October 13th), unlike the Qing court, showed scant regard for propriety by leaking the ending of the TV drama that had me hooked.
To preface here, you cannot make a Hackintosh without a lot of resources, and due to the number of technical issues involved here, I will refer repeatedly to threads on Tonymacx86, a forum popular with Hackintoshers.
In a strange preface, Yaffe describes interviewing Mitchell for a New York Times piece in 2007, going to her house, and talking through the night, but getting "bitched out" by Mitchell once the piece was published.
"She's the girl who breaks the rules of the game and gets punished, which means that she's actually the best indication of which game we're playing, and what the rules are," Doyle writes in her preface.
In a preface, Yaffe describes the enchanted night, in 2007, when he stayed up talking to Mitchell for an interview for The New York Times — and the ensuing warmth that stopped cold when the article appeared.

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