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- @TEXT@
- Artichokes, a finger food, the leaves are pulled off, one
- at a time, the fleshy base dipped in sauce. A bowl of
- fresh fruit offered as a desert.
- @TEXT@
- There are various degrees of reaching for something
- across a table that are perfectly permissible, but one
- should not make an enormous stretch or rise from one's seat
- to reach across for something one needs at the table.
- @TEXT@
- A big blue bucket of blue blueberries.
- Some shun sunshine while others soak.
- A cup of coffee in a copper coffee pot.
- Sly Sam sips Sally's soup sloppily.
- @TEXT@
- The sinking steamer sunk on the sixth.
- Don't run ragged along the wrong lane!
- Sarah saw a sash shop of shiny sashes.
- A lively young fisher fished Fischer.
- @TEXT@
- Some baseball trivia: What do baseball
- players call the hand on which they don't
- wear a glove?
- Baseball players refer to it as the meat hand.
- @TEXT@
- If you wish to keep a secret, keep it to
- yourself. Every day is a good day if you
- put it to good use.
- @TEXT@
- Fishing for fish from edges of fissures.
- A maid with a duster made a big bluster.
- Sister Sue sewed shirts for soldiers.
- Thrice times three, twice times two.
- @TEXT@
- His shirt soon shrank in the suds.
- Bust dusting is a blast at the ball!
- Literally literary literature.
- @TEXT@
- Seven silly six-screw cruisers sailing.
- Blame the big bleak black book!
- Who washed Washington's white woolens?
- @TEXT@
- Will you rush the washing, Russell?
- Richard gave Robin a rap in the ribs.
- I need your needles- they're needless?
- The bootblack brought the book back.
- @TEXT@
- Wood said he would carry the wood.
- And if Wood said he would, Wood would.
- Quinn's twin sisters sing twisters.
- @TEXT@
- Unique New York's unique new walk.
- Six sickly thin thistle sticks stink!
- Shy Sheila shakes soft shimmering silks.
- @TEXT@
- Beautiful babbling brooks bubbles burst.
- Georgia's gorge is gorgeous by gosh!
- This shop stock short socks with spots?
- Sammy! Shave six cedar shingles thinly.
- Wheedling, weeping Winnie wails wildly.
- How many cans can a clever canner can?
- @TEXT@
- A clever canner can can certain cans.
- Real typists ALWAYS make some misteaks.
- BASIC is an interpretative language.
- @TEXT@
- The Department of Redundancy Department.
- If you can type thirty WPM; great!
- The symbol at the end means press Enter.
- @TEXT@
- To develop a skill, no matter what it is,
- takes time of course. So devote as much time
- as possible to your daily work here. Have
- faith. Expert skill will come to you.
- @TEXT@
- Programming in BASIC is easy to learn.
- You should type this memo by tomorrow.
- I learned how to type using PC-FasType!
- The DOS Copy command copies files.
- @TEXT@
- Yes, Walt took the test. He told Jud it was easy.
- Take the ferry, Jerry. You will get there on time.
- Good daily work is a sure way to get to your goal.
- Try to do the work just right if you do it at all.
- @TEXT@
- Too many Xrays can be hazardous to you.
- It would be nice if you could plan ahea
- Commands may be separated by delimiters.
- Names and addresses are also required.
- A small boy with a watch has the time
- of his life.
- @TEXT@
- If you want to use the computer well, then
- why not learn how to type? It is a valuable
- skill to have. You can acquire it with
- PC-FasType; exert a bit of zeal.
- @TEXT@
- Here is my new encyclopedic dictionary.
- A disk drive is a peripheral device.
- "Constants Aren't, and Variables Won't"!
- The DOS Xcopy command can copy directories.
- @TEXT@
- Xerography is a dry copying process.
- Advanced BASIC has graphics commands.
- This program should be easy to use.
- A common data-base management system.
- Some parity errors will be detected.
- @TEXT@
- Practice typing to become proficient.
- A computer BYTE consists of eight bits.
- Zymurgy-(a branch of applied chemistry)
- Some words refer to things kept secret.
- @TEXT@
- Repeated exercise improves your skills.
- Records are written by track & sector.
- Main's Law:
- For every action there is an equal and opposite government
- program.
- @TEXT@
- Arithmetic is being able to count up to twenty without
- taking off your shoes.
- Mistakes are often the stepping stones to utter failure.
- Conscience is the inner voice that warns us somebody is
- looking.
- @TEXT@
- Malek's Law:
- Any simple idea will be worded in the most complicated way.
- Duct tape is like the force. It has a light side, and a dark
- side, and it holds the universe together.
- @TEXT@
- Where there's a will, there's an Inheritance Tax.
- Xerox does it again and again and again and ...
- The one who says it cannot be done should never interrupt
- the one who is doing it.
- @TEXT@
- The way to make a small fortune in the commodities
- market is to start with a large fortune.
- Politics is like coaching a football team; you have to be
- smart enough to understand the game but not smart enough to lose
- interest.
- @TEXT@
- These daily drills will aid you to get to your goal.
- Yes, Jane; Judy does her task with great skill.
- Walt told Harold Hale that he hooked a huge fish.
- The foods we need are butter, eggs, and milk.
- @TEXT@
- Aim to excel. Do your daily task to the best of
- your ability. Good work leads to a happy life.
- Remember: Success comes if you work at it.
- @TEXT@
- Time flies like an arrow,
- Fruit flies like a banana.
- @TEXT@
- Judge K. Qumquat did free the slow, tired jury for recess.
- Joe will take Paula to the party at Pete's house on Friday.
- George says he types all the letters for his dad.
- This work really tests his typing skills.
- @TEXT@
- It's durable, because it's simple.
- They aren't as urgent because they don't address
- problems of the day.
- @TEXT@
- Concrete detail is also the anchor of his prose.
- The oddity of the city, so remote from the ordinary American
- experience, is instantly clear.
- @TEXT@
- The alley caught the morning sun.
- The wash from the line often interfered with the free flap
- of the wash on the line above or below.
- @TEXT@
- It looked like a fossil landscape that had bee long since
- left behind by the rest of territorial evolution.
- Make a habit of reading what is being written today
- and what has been written before.
- Writing is learned by imitation.
- Get in the habit of using dictionaries.
- @TEXT@
- Bear in mind that when you choose words and string them
- together, how they sound.
- The good writer of prose must be part poet, always listening
- to what he writes.
- @TEXT@
- Haste makes waste. Take it easy. Life is too short.
- The tabulator has three parts. Kate says it is quite easy
- to type well. Correct typing posture is much more important
- than you think. It helps to build your skill at a much
- faster rate than poor posture.
- @TEXT@
- Considerations of sound and rhythm should be woven through
- everything you write. See if you can gain variety by reversing the
- order of a sentence.
- @TEXT@
- Remember that words are the only tools you will be given.
- Learn to use them with originality and care. Value them for their
- strength and their diversity. And -- remember -- somebody out there is
- listening.
- @TEXT@
- What is good word usage? What is bad word usage? What is
- good English? Why is one word good and another word cheap.
- Language is a fabric that changes from one week to the next.
- @TEXT@
- A quorum is the minimum number of members who must be
- present at a meeting for the transaction of business.
- Unless there is a rule to the contrary,
- a quorum is a majority of the members.
- @TEXT@
- When the time arrives for taking up an order, the
- chairperson must proceed with a knowledge of whether the
- order is a general order or a special order.
- @TEXT@
- If debate has been closed, then up until the moment of
- taking the final vote a motion may still be laid on the table.
- It is not permissible to apply a motion to lay on the table
- to an entire group of motions or a group of items of business,
- such as committee reports.
- @TEXT@
- In ordinary assemblies, by judicious appointment of
- committees, debates upon delicate and troublesome questions can be
- mostly confined to committee, which will contain representative members of
- all parties.
- @TEXT@
- A committee is a miniature assembly of one or more persons
- that must meet together in order to transact business and usually one of
- its members should be appointed its clerk.
- @TEXT@
- Motions in committee meetings and motions recommended
- by committees do not require seconds. When a committee
- adjourns to meet at another time, it is not necessary that absent
- members should be notified of the adjourned meeting.
- @TEXT@
- The brain is a wonderful organ; it starts working the moment
- you get up in the morning and does not stop until you get to
- the office.
- Until you walk a mile in another man's moccasins you can't
- imagine the smell.
- @TEXT@
- Byrne's Law: In any electrical circuit, appliances and
- wiring will burn our to protect fuses.
- McCabe's Law: Nobody HAS to do ANYthing!
- Parker's Law: Beauty may be only skin deep, but ugly goes
- right to the bone.
- @TEXT@
- Your goal is speed. Your goal is accuracy.
- Your ultimate goal is good typing skill.
- So quit looking at the keyboard.
- Put forth good effort. Reward will follow.
- @TEXT@
- Skill grows at a quite pace. Hurry is waste. Type
- at such a rate that you feel perfectly at ease.
- Type at a very steady pace, without pauses or jerks.
- This is how you will develop good typing skills.
- @TEXT@
- Try to do your work just as well as you can do it.
- Many a true word is said in jest; also many a lie.
- @TEXT@
- Aim for the top; it may help you to land half way.
- Mama and papa must be fit for a baby to live with.
- In days of yore they who did not work did not eat.
- @TEXT@
- They who type well find it easy to get a good job.
- you must hand it to the tax man or he may take it.
- @TEXT@
- A man with a bald head is one who came out on top.
- @TEXT@
- If at the end of the rope, tie a knot and hang on.
- your car is out of date as soon as it is paid for.
- The law of life: You must work for what you want.
- @TEXT@
- Know your job; that is the way to make good at it.
- Life is a game; play to win-and ever with a grin.
- Et it all but chew each bite ere you let it fall.
- @TEXT@
- Most all men are good-as god as they have to be.
- All work and no play robs one of some fun in life.
- @TEXT@
- The mature person bears the accidents of life with grace and
- dignity, making the best of things.
- Your mind is like your stomach; it is not how much
- you put into it, but how much can digest.
- @TEXT@
- The value of an education lies in the ability to
- make a living out of the know-how you acquired.