Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dunnhumby has offices in 25 countries employing 1500 people. [9] In 2006, Humby coined the phrase “Data is the new oil”. [10] Michael Palmer expanded on Humby's quote by saying, like oil, data is “valuable, but if unrefined it cannot really be used.
While for several years, 62 year old Nooyi has been a role model for women entrepreneurs across the world, people from other fields and across ages can also draw valuable life lessons from her ...
Oxymorons in the narrow sense are a rhetorical device used deliberately by the speaker and intended to be understood as such by the listener. In a more extended sense, the term "oxymoron" has also been applied to inadvertent or incidental contradictions, as in the case of "dead metaphors" ("barely clothed" or "terribly good").
Ietsism (Dutch: ietsisme, 'somethingism') is a term used for a range of beliefs held by people who, on the one hand, inwardly suspect—or indeed believe—that there is “more between Heaven and Earth” than we know about, but on the other hand do not accept or subscribe to the established belief system, dogma or view of the nature of God ...
“We are powerful because we have survived.” — Audre Lorde “Where there is love, there is life.” — Mahatma Gandhi “We declare that human rights are for all of us, all the time ...
Truth is the most valuable thing we have. Let us economise it. The precise phrase "economical with the truth" is attested from 1897. [10] [11] It was used in the New Zealand House of Representatives in 1923, [12] and the House of Commons of Canada in 1926; [13] "over-economical with the truth" was used in the British House of Commons in 1968.
But a few bronze planchets, a blank coin with no design, may have been left behind, resulting in extremely rare and valuable 1943-S bronze pennies. In 2016, one of these pennies sold at auction ...
Describing books that have been read as "far less valuable than unread ones", Taleb stated that "the more you know, the larger the rows of unread books. Let us call this collection of unread books an antilibrary." [6] Taleb additionally referred to people interested in antilibraries as antischolars. [7]