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  2. How to spell correctly, "hand-written" or "handwritten"?

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/128289

    Handwritten and hand-written are both adjectives which mean written using a pen or pencil, instead of being printed or typed. The former version (handwritten) is the correct spelling but hand-written isn't incorrect too (alternative spelling). As a compound word it used to be hyphened but lost that in years.

  3. Why Church Leaders Should Write More Handwritten Notes

    churchanswers.com/blog/why-church-leaders-should-write-more-handwritten-notes

    Handwritten notes take time. Time is money. Money is important. When you take the time to write someone a handwritten note, you are sending a message that is greater than the few sentences contained in the note. A handwritten note demonstrates personal investment in an individual. Beauty. Even if you have sloppy penmanship, there is a beauty to ...

  4. Seven Handwritten Cards Every Pastor Needs to Write

    churchanswers.com/podcasts/est-church/seven-handwritten-cards-every-pastor...

    Some old-school habits are worth keeping. Handwritten notes are a quick way to make a significant impact on your congregation. But when should you write these notes? And to whom? Josh and Sam discuss seven opportunities to handwrite a note. The hosts give some advice on what to include in these notes and how often to send them.

  5. Seven Reasons Why Writing Handwritten Notes Will Revolutionize...

    churchanswers.com/podcasts/rainer-on-leadership/seven-reasons-writing-seven...

    Writing handwritten notes takes your focus off the negativity in ministry and places it on the positives. When you write notes of gratitude to others, your attitude becomes more positive as a result. With just 30-minutes a week of writing handwritten notes, you can dramatically improve the positivity in your ministry.

  6. meaning - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/7433

    PRINT NAME is simply defined as writing your name in CAPITAL LETTERS! Unlike Signatures that are mostly written in cursive or scribbles, thus making them hard to read, PRINT NAME simply demands that you write very clearly and without connecting the letters, So your writing looks like Printed Text!

  7. Eight of the Most Significant Struggles Pastors Face

    churchanswers.com/blog/eight-of-the-most-significant-struggles-pastors-face

    Before me are handwritten notes that I took over a few weeks from various social media interactions, emails, and a few phone calls. The total is nearly 200 separate communications to me. I kept a record of them for one simple reason: I wanted to identify the greatest pain points of pastors today. In many ways, there are no surprises.

  8. How should I present my telephone number?

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/9771

    How should I write my mobile telephone number in an email? I want to send something like Hi, Following is my mobile number 0000 000 000 Thanks or Hi, My mobile number is 000 000 0000 Please feel...

  9. Key Issues for Follow-up of Guests | Church Answers

    churchanswers.com/podcasts/rainer-on-leadership/key-issues-follow-guests...

    Handwritten notes have great power in our digital world because they are so rare. Someone in a group is five times more likely to stick with a church than someone in worship alone. Loose guest cards have a higher return rate than perforated ones connected to the bulletin. The six keys we cover on this episode are: The time is short

  10. And as an ex-South African I found both styles strange when I moved to North America, I almost freaked when my daughter started doing cursive and the some of the letters are written backwards and require more pen up, pen down actions than the system I (and it seems is still taught in South Africa)

  11. meaning - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/13290/what

    As an aside, sb (substantive) in the OED1 corresponds to n (noun) in the OED2 and later. The OED2 still categorizes re as a noun, but it adds: "Now freq. apprehended as a preposition, and used in weakened senses to mean 'about, concerning'."