Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
"I am receiving a signal from other sections of my brain-work.
There were business suits which tended to gather in groups, sliderule men, these, who had done the brain-work on the Platform's design.
Today's white-collar workers should watch out, because brain-work can be easily outsourced over telecommunication wires around the globe.
I cannot live without brain-work.
"Okay, but I grew up far away, in a world where people had sound nutrition and medicine, and robots did everything but the brain-work!
Like his would-be rescuers, Jorcott miscalculated The Shadow's brain-work.
Without free street-fellowship, open air all day, and gambols by the kennel-side with negation of brain-work, London is a sorry place to bring up children in.
That is not cerebration, brain-work, it is a matter of FEELING.
During his time spent in Russia he wrote one of his earliest texts, The Nature of Human Brain-Work, which was published in 1869.
Certainly neither Tarvel nor Alcott was responsible; not only did they lack imagination and humor, they were paying for the party and expected the hired help to do the brain-work.
The seizure of his brain and his brain-work, of his knowledge of the ship, of the ship-controlling mechanisms in his armor, must have been their goal from the first.
The doctor's warnings had been neglected; his over-strained nerves had given way; and the man whose strong constitution had resisted cold and starvation in the Arctic wastes, had broken down under stress of brain-work in London.
Ricky Gervais, you could improve your humor by researching your subjects; all of us humans are doing and saying things that make others laugh; humor takes a little brain-work, well, Rickey Gervais, if you are up to the exertion.
They could make as much or more for the glory of the country; they could be at any rate of infinitely greater service, but they would not be received, simply because they would compel close attention and brain-work in the reader as well as in the writer of them.
To read History involves not only some permanent interest in things not immediately sensible, but also some permanent brain-work in the reader; for as one reads history one cannot, if one is an intelligent being, forbear perpetually to contrast the lessons it teaches with the received opinions of our time.