Putting in a sentence as a noun

But he's putting his own reputation behind AirBnb, and AirBnb is lying. That's unwise.

I felt even worse for putting them through such an experience. All told, I was in custody from around 10am to 11pm and I've learned a few things on the inside.

Even if I'm putting Windows right back on it? I started doing it because of the **** they bundle in there, but this seems like an unintended good reason to do so as well.

This 5min latency was putting people at risk and killing folks. So I wrote a tool to automate this man's job, in VBA. I picked up the language on site and reduced that latency to ~15s.

As the main developer of VLC, we know about this story since a long time, and this is just Dell putting **** components on their machine and blaming others. Any discussion was impossible with them.

They are not thinking critically or putting themselves in the conference attendee's shoes. I'm quite sure they would not like to be publicly outed for a private conversation.

The appropriateness of swearing is highly contextual - putting it in a job ad likely shows that you don't know where sensible boundaries are.

Imagine enjoying a court side seat at a game, studying in a classroom of students and teachers all over the world or consulting with a doctor face-to-face -- just by putting on goggles in your home. Nah, I'd rather not, thank you.

At least when, say, jwz was putting in insane hours at Netscape he was building Netscape Navigator. Also those Farmville character cutouts in the photo are possibly the creepiest thing in the universe.

So if you are putting yourself into a position that is not really challenging, that is a bummer day in and day out, and you get things done slowly, you aren't just having a slow time now. You are bringing down that compound interest curve for the rest of your career.

If society were a game of Civilization, I'd be putting all of my resource points towards the "Self driving cars" achievement. Of course the insurance companies, car manufacturers, oil companies, etc.

Hollywood and moralists have done us a great disservice by putting these horrible outlier pictures in people's heads when they think of drug use. Take for instance the word "addict", which like the word "war" is such a broad term that it doesn't have much meaning on it's own without further clarification.

Knowingly putting yourself in danger to be the first line of defense against a potentially epidemic outbreak, deserves special recognition. Everyone should know these doctors' names.

He recently went on some kind of insane power trip, completely disregarding the needs of his customers, putting me on unpaid leave for ... reporting an incident of fraud to a bank.

And certainly don't be proud putting in 60+ hours for some one else, even if they are buying you with stock options. To be clear, some of us are lucky enough to make money by doing things we would otherwise do anyway, there is nothing wrong with devoting you life to your hobby and have it bring you a ton of money in the process.

While writing Java can feel like putting together a legal contract, writing Scala can feel like creating a poem. I'm not making a value judgement in either direction there--I feel that poetry is a good metaphor, because things in Scala tend to fall apart in the reading department.

They just want to cash out so that they can have their financial freedom and then go out of the limelight and back to doing the same things they enjoy but without having to constantly worry about job security and putting food on the table. Notch achieved this in the most spectacular way possible and I think he handled it perfectly.

I also point out to women when they're putting up with sexist behavior, because it's so ingrained in our culture that too few even recognize it properly. To say I'm pretty well steeped in both the academic and practical sides of gender politics, identity, and sexism would put it rather mildly.

How can I take the article seriously when it says that "GitHub has been embroiled in a series of diversity controversies, such as programmers adding racial and sexist slurs into their code", which links to an article where someone took GitHub search and found random people putting bad words into their public repos? This author can't seem to distinguish between the code employees at GitHub write, and code users put onto GitHub.

Either the President is lying, or Congress is putting on a sham of shock when they were already aware of all of this, or the President is throwing them under the bus for not bothering to read and understand the information before reauthorizing--thus making a move to avert public outrage toward their representatives, all of whom allegedly had this information and ignored it when reauthorizing. Or something else.

No, given that the promised stock was already 18 months late, the company was close to going under, and Fred was not putting his statement in writing, I didn't know I was in line for any stock at all. Apparently none of Fred's talk about stock meant anything: With the original copy of the offer letter, all the promises, all my records from then, when I contacted Fred with all the information, he and his FedEx lawyer refused to pay me anything, and a lawyer told me that legally FedEx owed me nothing.

I even started putting together components for it, such as a model for finding text inside of larger documents that had statistical properties similar to code, auto-detecting the language, so you could find code snippets inside of blog posts. However, by the time we got organized enough to actually do it, Google Code launched, and had this really awesome code searching feature, that everyone considered to be "more than good enough" and "comprehensive, as Google is indexing the **** out of stuff like this".

Proper Noun Examples for Putting

Putting together a team of over 100 people, including 25 professors, to act as "spokespeople on Hayes" 4. buying Google keywords for his name and variants to astroturf people searching for him.

Putting definitions

noun

hitting a golf ball that is on the green using a putter; "his putting let him down today; he didn't sink a single putt over three feet"

See also: putt