Author in a sentence as a noun

It's noble of the author to quit, but it's not his fault.

The author is not claiming to be a design expert, nor is she publishing a "how to design" guide.

A reader could be excused for having concerns that the author was not an objective witness.

* "Steve" later informs the author, "its ok to make jokes about slavery because thats over".

The author is informed that any attire is acceptable except for baggy jeans.

* Later, a women asks whether the pendant the author is wearing, which is from Nairobi, is "a calculator".

So the author shouldn't get his panties in a bunch; no one is dragging the humanities down from it's privileged societal prestige.

After hearing the author's complaints, "Steve" says, "Whoa whoa whoa, those comments youre hearing arent racist; theyre jokes", and then "The problem is that youre too sensitive.

This article is only on the front page of HN because of its author and it bears remembering how Putin's actions have spoken far louder than his words.

Author in a sentence as a verb

All of what you're reading makes perfect sense, because you are very familiar with the concepts author introduces, with methods of working with them, and with known results about them.

"Peppered throughout the post are cultural signs and signifiers that mark the author as an advocate for a fairly specific set of political and social beliefs.

"* The latino coworker is then told "I would have gotten you one too but they didnt have ******* to english"* The author, who is black, is then told "Hey hes dressed like Run DMC, does he know how to rap?

Where the author of the article may have failed in some of the important technical details of the article, you have also failed in presenting your corrections in a somewhat offensive manner.

I learned something new and mathematically-interesting about the natural world, the author came up with a clever hack to enliven backgrounds, and we learn how to apply that to improve our own designs.

The conclusions the author draws, that Gates was "anchored in the old paradigm of storage being a commodity that must be conserved" sounds like typical hand-wavy details-don't-matter business-person think.

I'm all for people having the freedom to eat whatever they want and I really like the quantified self aspect of seeing how diet affects how they feel and metrics of health, but I have to say the author grossly does not understand the medical tests he had done and misinterprets the data.

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.

It should be used in conjunction with a multi-faceted interviewing approach that involves testing fundamentals, the ability to construct a relatively simple algorithm, the issues of working on a team and on a production code base and systems design.- the problem with simply talking about "real world" code, as the author suggests, is you're no longer finding a good engineer, you're finding someone you like, someone who thinks like you.

Author definitions

noun

writes (books or stories or articles or the like) professionally (for pay)

See also: writer

noun

someone who originates or causes or initiates something; "he was the generator of several complaints"

See also: generator source

verb

be the author of; "She authored this play"