Smith is really savvy in math
She proved to be very savvy in the Stock Market, making smart investments that yielded high returns.
She is a savvy businesswoman who knows how to negotiate deals and make smart investments.
The word "include" in this sentence is a verb. It is used to show that savvy job seekers today add an app for their iPhone or iPad as part of their strategy.
To savvy is to understand or comprehend something intuitively or quickly.
In the sentence, "yet" is a coordinating conjunction.
Sure, could you please provide me with the sentence you would like the word "to" to be used in?
When used as a noun, 'savvy' means common sense. The candidate seems to have no political savvy.
Savvy us generally used to denote understanding of a concept, or mechanic. "He was savvy with the workings of the handgun" "He had a savvy understanding of how it worked"
I hope they savvy the parley, pilgrim.
The book savvy is in the YRCA for 2011.
Many people these days are savvy consumers
Savvy that? Yup ive got savvy like you do, my dah-ling. She's got a lot of savvy.
To savvy is to understand or comprehend something intuitively or quickly.
More people are cholesterol savvy today than five years ago.
It could be used in any sentence as an adjective. That sentence could be, "I'm quite busty and I fear it would look matronly on me."
Style boutique is used in the U.K., and style savvy is used in the U.S.
I just used genre in a sentence.
"Gigantic" is not technically a 'proper' word. It could be used in a sentence like "The apple was gigantic", but that is not a formal sentence and could not be used in an essay for example.