Verse in a sentence as a noun

Yet now I move boldly Into a new verse The ******* matches don't work. **** this ********.

But next the NYT says more detailed logs are pointless: I could recite chapter and verse of the test drive... I dont think thats useful here.

Here is my favorite Bible verse related to programming. I subtitle it, "God, calling a function."

"I could recite chapter and verse of the test drive, the decisions made along the way, the cabin temperature of the car, the cruise control setting and so on. I dont think thats useful here."

There are many alternate views on the origin of this verse itself. The one I find most believable, is that this is a fairly recent fabrication [1].

This is also why, though you can read Homer in English that is metrical, you can't get a feel for heroic verse without hearing it in the Greek. Let me give an indirect example that shows why this kind of reasoning doesn't work across languages.

AT&T has recently tried to charge me a leasing fee for my U-verse router. I called in and explained to the person on the phone that I own the router, and referred him to my first months statement were it specifically states that I paid $160+ for the router.

They just didn't see any reason to bother with the hassle of deploying a newer technology when they could just keep maintaining U-verse over twisted pair, even if capex stayed the same for either choice. Which is an interesting choice.

If you edit the email and send, they now add more hard newlines for where the new line endings are and you end up with a mix of tiny lines and normal lines looking like your email is written in free verse.

Verse in a sentence as a verb

All sounds well and good, until you realize that a "bad domain" in the Google-verse isn't limited to spammers, but also for instance domains from which something was published that the copyright-mafia didn't take kindly to. Or whatever other obscure reasons and methods Google may have to blacklist domains."

The 2008 housing crisis was similar; we did it to ourselves and didn't often enough see the disaster coming and haven't been very smart about fixing the problem, and the same song, first verse was in the 12 years after the 1929 crash. Then somehow the more developed economies were much more closely linked than one would expect.

Lots of people noticed it and blogged about it and as a result, the network appears to have done a quick editing job to delete those exact elements from the version that broadcast - they left off one whole verse to do it.

It's honestly one of the primary reasons I can't stand reading his stuff; each little hashmark is a reminder that the writer thinks his thoughts are so important you will want to quote them by chapter and verse, like a holy text.

I have no problem with ruby as a language, even if it takes flexibility a step too far, however the style of coders, and the general "I did something clever and unreadable so I'm awesome" attitude seems to permeate the ruby-verse. Also while many improvements have been made on the ruby interpreters...

Not only did the person you originally responded to even qualify with a "for the most part" -- thus allowing for the existence of bad code in said C++ culture -- every significant codebase in the verse has a neglected corner or three. Moreover, one man's "globally crappy" code is another man's halfway-decent code.

Its exemplified from a verse in Gita: You have power to your actions only, not its outcome. Act therefore forth right without succumbing to inaction This is to dedicate yourself towards a goal, consciously iterating and eliminating your faults in moments of self reflection improvising and not giving up until you reach your goal.

The Bible as an ebook in standard epub or kindle format kind of sucks because it is often referenced in particular book/chapter/verse and it's a big enough book that navigation doesn't work super well on a kindle type device, but Bible apps are fantastic because they make it easy and fast to navigate, get multiple translations, etc. Same content, different formats/presentation.

Verse definitions

noun

literature in metrical form

See also: poetry poesy

noun

a piece of poetry

See also: rhyme

noun

a line of metrical text

verb

compose verses or put into verse; "He versified the ancient saga"

See also: versify poetize poetise

verb

familiarize through thorough study or experience; "She versed herself in Roman archeology"