To meet those challenges, scholars must be proficient in more than one area of study. |
|
Many Flemings have always been proficient in French, while Walloons were seldom proficient in Dutch. |
|
Unless you are unusually proficient with a jointer, trying to cut the bevel freehand is asking for trouble. |
|
In connection with the four stroke engines, they have proficient use of gas. |
|
It seems that the brain takes sides in promoting the skills necessary for proficient reading. |
|
This Act proposes that every student in grades 3 through 8 will be proficient in reading and math. |
|
It's technically very proficient, and revealing about contemporary life in Russia, though it does tend to fizzle out in the final reel. |
|
By high school he was proficient at the koto, viola, clarinet and electric guitar. |
|
Once you get more proficient and are a lot less likely to fall, you might start to eschew wristguards. |
|
As restaurateurs become more proficient and experienced, cash generation becomes more and more consistent. |
|
He quickly became proficient in this study, and lectured widely on them thereafter. |
|
Certainly the aristos from the centre of Spain are more proficient at handling trophies. |
|
After a decade of the Revolution in Military Affairs the US armoury is now much larger and more proficient. |
|
A part-time accurate audio typist is required with good typing speeds and proficient word processing skills. |
|
She is also a kickboxing instructor, a certified personal trainer and a proficient student of tae kwon do. |
|
Many of the participants would be generally regarded as technically proficient Web users. |
|
Also, the older children speak proficient English instead of the telegraphic dialect the Shimerdas use in the early chapters. |
|
This thriller of thrillers is a study of human conflict, jealousy and manipulation, which promises to baffle the most proficient sleuth. |
|
Daniel Defoe was knowledgeable and proficient in seamanship, he understood the workings of a ship and the skills required for its operation. |
|
Try to get one or two methods or techniques that you become proficient at and work on them. |
|
|
Arctic Wild prides itself on local guides proficient in natural history, low impact camping and top-quality gear. |
|
She is a versatile player who generally plays in midcourt but is also a proficient shooter. |
|
He hopes to open an athletic center, and to become more proficient in mixed martial arts. |
|
Despite his own proficient bilingualism, Sr. Verdugo represented himself to children as a Spanish monolingual. |
|
Few people deafened in middle age become proficient in sign language or identify strongly with deaf culture. |
|
Perhaps the most proficient skateboarder of the team, he is difficult to watch, let alone like. |
|
The stronger and more technically proficient a skier is, the stiffer the ski can be. |
|
Roughly speaking, those over 40 are more likely to be fully fluent and proficient in the Navajo language. |
|
Her first months were spent in language school, where she became proficient in Urdu. |
|
Barnes was proficient in Spanish, French, and German and read three other languages. |
|
What marks a proficient second or foreign language speaker is their command of idioms and other fixed expressions. |
|
The proficient practitioner of bushcraft anticipates his or her needs before it gets dark. |
|
A strange tendency to deliver random lines in a hoarse and uncalled-for stage whisper notwithstanding, Houston is a very proficient actor. |
|
Mechanisms that prevent selfing and its harmful effects and promote more proficient pollen dispersal have shaped much of floral evolution. |
|
Tutors who are familiar with the Secondary School Curriculum and who are proficient in Irish and Maths will be given preference. |
|
His service in Tunisia turned a defeated and demoralized II Corps around and made it proficient for battle in 11 days. |
|
Jim was brought up in China until the age of six, but later continued his interest in China and was proficient in the Chinese language. |
|
He coached them in becoming proficient riders and huntsmen, skilled archers and unyielding wrestlers. |
|
It may not be possible for all of us to be experts, but we can, with practice, become reasonably proficient. |
|
It is believed that the vast majority of these students will eventually become proficient. |
|
|
Though obviously very proficient at what they do, they are also used to their own way of doing things. |
|
With medicine, the school and the state are throwing all kinds of resources at me to make me proficient. |
|
I'm not nearly that proficient, but a bit of ambidexterity can benefit any golfer. |
|
In a nutshell, the series went in favour of the team that was more professional and proficient in skills as well as in strategies. |
|
Although he was very proficient at these jobs, he soon decided to pursue higher education. |
|
It is fascinating to watch a complete novice become proficient in a specialised job in a mere four weeks. |
|
As man became more and more proficient in making war, he also became wiser in means of defense. |
|
To do less is to be less than fully proficient on matters of critical importance to our national security. |
|
Their traditional weapon was the naginata, a form of glaive, but they were also proficient in archery and swordsmanship. |
|
As they become proficient in handling their bikes they are subtly introduced to the need for disciplined behaviour on the road. |
|
And that's all it is, one giant performance after another in hopes their proficient thespian skills will pay dividends in the long run. |
|
After leaving West Point in 1915, Eisenhower quickly established himself as a proficient trainer of young recruits. |
|
Like any proficient superhero I didn't take up this job for the accolades. |
|
Highly proficient programmers can write machine code programs that can be sent across a data stream into a Web browser or other communications program. |
|
The same will not be said about My Week With Marilyn, no matter how proficient Williams is. |
|
Sent to China to convert the heathens, Ricci began by dressing like a Chinese mandarin and learning the Chinese language until he was proficient in it. |
|
More impressive than their appearance were their proficient debating skills. |
|
As proficient as he was in making people trust him, she eventually became wise to his masquerade. |
|
Knowing that Chinese rulers especially respected the mathematical sciences, he studied them diligently and became proficient at map-making and astronomy. |
|
Children may become lost or ensnarled, and some of their music may go missing without teachers and other musically proficient adults to help the young along, however. |
|
|
He knows exactly what he wants and is very proficient and professional. |
|
Against the Portuguese side, however, this seemed the product of facing a side as proficient in stultifying opponents as Celtic have proved in the past. |
|
A proficient clocker can complete a rollback job in a matter of minutes. |
|
As a body, our platoon sergeants and first sergeants are so talented, proficient and self-confident that, more than ever, new lieutenants can be intimidated. |
|
Lots of things that now seem canonical would not have been accessible to Leonardo, who was not that proficient in Latin. |
|
He says he doesn't have the patience required to become proficient. |
|
By the end of the trip, they were proficient at climbing, sledging and survival in Arctic conditions, and had walked more than 100 km in snow shoes. |
|
The miscegenation Ball was an exception in its otherwise bland, though proficient, catalog. |
|
Thus, two of the polymerase mutants are modest spontaneous mutators for some point mutations in yeast strains that are proficient in DNA mismatch repair. |
|
Better be proficient in one art than a smatterer in a thousand. |
|
Boyd has established himself alongside Hilary Mantel and Martin Amis as one of the most keen-witted and proficient of contemporary British writers. |
|
Many students come to school proficient in neither Navajo nor English. |
|
Two and a half years ago, as the primary complement to Garnett in the team's offensive sets, the deadeye shooter was proficient enough to be chosen to the NBA All-Star Team. |
|
He was said to be proficient at almost every wind instrument. |
|
Then the fingers at the ends of those long, thin, untanned arms attacking the piano with the furiously proficient ardor of a Rubinstein or a Rubirosa. |
|
His is not proficient in Indonesian, having used his Ambonese dialect most of his life, and his wife helps in explaining his thoughts as he stumbles over words. |
|
Not only will you feel proficient, but you will probably do it more often. |
|
As a student becomes more proficient, extraneous material can be added. |
|
As I continue with kayaking, I am becoming more proficient at righting my kayak and feeling more in control of my actions, more knowledgeable and less disoriented. |
|
Some of us were less proficient than others with our chopsticks! |
|
|
An ardent linguist proficient in ancient Oriental languages, Napp had many other passions, including horticulture, viniculture, and fruit growing. |
|
And, judging by the titles, they're not written by the most grammatically proficient users. |
|
Lola, California is a startling novel, as prodigiously smart as it is technically proficient. |
|
In addition, third graders using Waterford jumped from 0 to 50 percent proficient in phonemic awareness. |
|
However, many hillwalkers become proficient in scrambling, an activity involving use of the hands for extra support on the crags. |
|
Plenty of people begin the training, but few stick it out for the year or two necessary to become proficient. |
|
She would let me know in a most untender manner if Brother Fielding told her I wasn't proficient. |
|
Some are proficient in several Chinese dialects, given the linguistic diversity of the ethnic Chinese community in both countries. |
|
There were a handful of surgeons such as Henry de Mondeville, who were very proficient and were employed by Kings such as King Phillip. |
|
The Black Death may also have promoted the use of vernacular English, as the number of teachers proficient in French dwindled. |
|
They enter the water only hours after they are born, and quickly become proficient divers. |
|
Fighting on foot is both habitual and a national custom and they are proficient in this. |
|
They were expected to become proficient in Latin and Greek and to have learned major portions of the New Testament by heart. |
|
Studying under Thomas Linacre and William Grocyn, he became proficient in both Latin and Greek. |
|
One definition is that a person is bilingual by being equally proficient in both languages. |
|
He is a proficient pianist and stated in a 1995 interview with Charlie Rose that he would rather be a musician than an actor. |
|
The unified kingdom of Denmark emerged in the 10th century as a proficient seafaring nation in the struggle for control of the Baltic Sea. |
|
Water deer are proficient swimmers, and can swim several miles to reach remote river islands. |
|
Bell became so proficient that he became a part of his father's public demonstrations and astounded audiences with his abilities. |
|
He was a supporter of the NE Patriots and the Red Sox, was proficient completing jig saw puzzles and enjoyed many bus trips to Foxwoods. |
|
|
Whoever can deal with these mortal spirits and command them to do his business is proficient in the second species of nigromancy. |
|
Spike Milligan later noted that Sellers was very proficient on the drums and might have remained a jazz drummer, had he lacked his skills in mimicry and improvisation. |
|
The Faroe Islands have an active music scene, with live music being a regular part of the Islands' life and many Faroese being proficient at a number of instruments. |
|
In both areas, sculpture was initially of stone, and later of terracotta and metal as the civilizations in these areas became more technologically proficient. |
|
Students were particularly proficient in reading and mathematics. |
|
Raised as a Goth, he later became proficient in both Greek and Latin. |
|
His academic education had been in arithmetic, geography, grammar, history, reading, spelling, and writing and he became proficient in Hebrew, Italian, Latin and Spanish. |
|
He was a proficient writer with an interest in human nature. |
|
His father therefore started Marc on a classical education, but he showed no liking for Greek or Latin and instead showed himself proficient in drawing and mathematics. |
|
I have become proficient in making wine recommendations, and that translates into hosting more wine pairing events and tableside tastings at our winery. |
|
Just weigh the technological or mechanical advantages of upgrading against the investment of time and money it will take to become proficient with it in the field. |
|
The anthological descendents of Winning, therefore, represented an accurate picture of the most prolific and proficient poetry being written by American veterans of the war. |
|
Does it only apply to members of non-dominant racial and ethnic groups who become interactionally proficient in dominant cultural group norms and practices? |
|
He was not keen on sport, but he was a highly proficient dancer. |
|
Audience adaptation in the essays of proficient and nonproficient writers. |
|
As a 1st-grade teacher, I know how important it is for a child to enter 1st grade with the prerequisite phonological skills that lead to proficient reading. |
|
Jakub Dovalil's technically proficient and physically powerful side are buoyant after beating Ukraine 2-1 and overpriced at 4-1 in Viborg this evening. |
|
They considered the Italian anthologies to be analogous to Petrarchan handbooks or commonplace books that helped them become proficient in the language of Petrarchism. |
|
They have said that you should not take knowledge from someone who has taken it from the insides of books without reading under shaykhs or one proficient shaykh. |
|
Only at Hughes-Elizabeth Lakes Union and Muroc Joint Unified did more than half the students score at proficient or advanced levels in both English-language arts and math. |
|
|
An intelligent child, Pitt quickly became proficient in Latin and Greek. |
|
An article from The Atlantic claims that only 1 percent of the adults within the American population consider themselves proficient in speaking a foreign language. |
|