I have also read Oliver Sacks's " Migraine ", and neither it nor the illustrations it holds match the phenomenon I want to put a name to.
42.
"To be able to put a name to a work of art from an era when most people didn't care what an African American was is significant ."
43.
They could not put a name to the corpse until both parents arrived at the police station after seeing a report on the 11 o'clock news of a child dying at the playground
44.
Not surprisingly, much of the most important networking takes place at the Sunday gatherings, where people can put a name to a face and talk more freely than an electronic format allows.
45.
So, dear reference junkies, are there websites specifically for this purpose, to help the forgetful find something they once came across or heard of and now cannot put a name to?
46.
I have about as little interest in Barbie dolls as I have in anything that I can actually put a name to; thus ads for Barbie dolls would be safely lost on me.
47.
However, this is expected to be opened before Donghae Nambu Line, If the take over operations at the Busan Transportation Corporation, could put a name to the Donghae Nambu Line Route 5.
48.
It would, of course, be unfair to put a name to the kind of people we are talking about here, so I will not say that it is someone like CBS basketball analyst Billy Packer.
49.
Carol Rizzotti said recently, " there are faces, some of them I can put a name to and some of them I can't, and we'll never see them again ."
50.
When Dr . B U . K . Li finally put a name to her misery six months ago at Children's Memorial Hospital, the diagnosis _ cyclic vomiting syndrome _ was both a godsend and a curse.