Brissot became known as a simple and capable writer and dealt with what he has, what is called a simple feather, although he sometimes runs away with it. I choose them here at random because the evil is so simple. In fact, Chopin even criticized the master, where he is generally considered a superficial princeps. This class of women, called superficial, is unknown to me, or if I let myself be carried away with them, then without knowing it, and by innate simplicity. Even if they delve into superficial debates about the young king`s « A list, » it could have a significant impact on their electoral prospects. Wherever you go, you`ll hear the simple gossip of literature on the tram or in the car. Arriving in Cincinnati, where he obtained a job in the commercial telegraph department of the Western Union for a salary of $60 a month, Edison met Milton F. Adams, already called easy originators, the typical telegraphist in all its most sociable and brilliant aspects. Easy comes from the Latin facilis, which means « easy, » and facere, « to do or to do. » The adjective may mean « light » or « ease, » as befits its Latin roots, but it now often adds the meaning of inappropriate haste or superficiality, as in « simple answers to complex questions. » It turns out that the word « shield » referred to the gold or silver coins that began to be used during the reign of Louis IX, in 1266, so that it was an easy name to remember for the French, when they learned that they would have to give up their dear French franc. Then I picked up a book that shredded my superficial prejudices – Hard Stuff: The Autobiography of Mayor Coleman Young. I just found this word, underlined twice, on something that looks like an old physics assignment with excursions into seemingly impenetrable calculations. Mysterious. The simple conclusion that can be drawn from all this is that teenagers should not be allowed to approach cars.
But we should be wary of the superficial tradition of criticizing (or simply mocking) colleges, professors, and young people. Although it is a nice French word, Easy is both a compliment and an insult, depending on how it is used. Something that shows voluntary skills is simple, like with text messages. But if something is too simple and superficial or shows little care, it can also be called superficial. « Being too cowardly to tell the truth and admit that he hadn`t, he used the superficial and sarcastic excuse that the dog had eaten his homework. » Real profilers should be careful and not engage in frivolous ethnic, racial or religious « profiling ». I`m torn between not wanting to speak ill of another Guinness drinker and pointing out how simple your view of the link between lobbyists and government is. But he was a man of pronounced executive skills, and when the opportunity arose, he carried a simple and ready pen. While most McCarthy comparisons were cheap, all were easy. Election experts say such models can be easily explained, but Byrne called the layoffs « superficial bromides » that don`t reassure him or millions of other Americans. Free time is stolen from us, language is easily degraded and commercialized, and anything done for « serious human purposes » becomes irrelevant.
The learned and ingenious John Schweighaeuser (a name easy to spell and sweet to pronounce) was pleased that the appendix continens particulam doctrinae de mente humana, which closes the volume of his « Opuscula Academica », states (we translate from memory) that when someone does something easily or shows lightness, it is well described as superficial, But if someone takes the easy way and shows a lack of thought or care, it`s easy in the wrong way. But the term may very well be older than this period of simple illustration. For the second time, I felt my superficial invention sit on me a little less easily. Titelmusik von Joshua Stamper ©2006 New Jerusalem Music/ASCAP Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 3 « Brescia » to « Bulgaria » Poets Forum (Part 1) : Ange Mlinko : Harriet the Blog : The Poetry Foundation Newt Gingrich Answers Your Questions – Freakonomics Blog – NYTimes.com.