"Middle-class squeeze may be a better descriptive phrase for what is happening than wage stagnation, " said William Kristol, a former adviser to Republican candidates and now editor of The Standard, a conservative magazine.
32.
Most short titles include a descriptive phrase followed by the type of legislation and the year of enactment; for example, the Human Rights Act 1998 is an Act of Parliament relating to human rights that received Royal Assent in 1998.
33.
The remainder of the sets contain a simple frontispiece consisting of a decorated border framing the descriptive phrase, " The History and Romance of Northern Europe; a Library of Supreme Classics Printed in Complete Form . These editions include:
34.
In addition to placing the descriptive phrase after the name, " where it belongs ", Reed suggested that if the phrase goes before the name, it should begin with " a " or " the ".
35.
For uniformity purposes, a descriptive phrase such as [ Town Newspaper of the Five Colleges of Ohio ] or [ The Real Estate Record ] has been used as the author, of a reference below where authorship is unknown.
36.
"It's like crack, " said NBC Entertainment president Garth Ancier, at a news conference in Pasadena, taking a page from Grushow's descriptive phrase for reality shows, a wording he first used last year.
37.
The AP suggests that the apostrophe be eliminated entirely in this sort of descriptive phrase : " Do not add an apostrophe to a word ending in s when it is used primarily in a descriptive sense : a teachers college, a writers guide.
38.
As early as 1814, we find "'King James'version "', evidently a descriptive phrase, being used . " The King James Version " is found, unequivocally used as a name, in a letter from 1855.
39.
Service catalogs also allow leadership and management, for example the Chief Operations Officer ( COO ), to compartmentalize the enterprise into highly structured and more efficient operational units, hence the descriptive phrase : " " a service-oriented enterprise " ."
40.
The transcripts display sloppy editing, mistaking the H . G . Wells title " The Shape of Things to Come " for a descriptive phrase, and implying that the expression " from here to Kalamazoo " is the title of a Noel Coward play.