Use of an asterix is appropriate when the author feels some additional information ought to be supplied for the readers' benefit. Importance alone can be conveyed by underlining or putting the term into italics to make it stand out.
Astrik L. Gabriel has written: 'Garlandia'
They had to put something on their food
data collection is something that you put your work in and saves your data
you can put it anywhere if it is not covering something important
on becker press the astrik button on the right then using the station preset numbers punch in the code and your radio should fire up
It can mean literally a folder, or it can mean a collection of something
Yes. You are - almost literally - what you eat. Your body cannot be made out of something unless you put it there yourself (or your parents did).
There really is no way. If you put the lock on something open important, you may have to cut the lock.
Scientists put limitations in their work in order to remain ethical in their work. They also do so as a precautionary measure in case something goes wrong.
The phrase "you cannot quite put your finger on" means that you are unable to fully understand or explain something, even though you feel like there is something significant or important about it that you can't pinpoint. It conveys a sense of ambiguity or uncertainty.
You cannot put an object "in" something that has no space for something to be "in". For example: Wrong: I put the towel in the table. (There is no way to put something "in" the wood of a table.)Right: I put the towel on the table.To put something "on" another object/person it must indicate something outside of it.Wrong: I put my coat in the hook. (There is no way to put a coat "in" a hook.)Right: I put my coat on the hook.I put the clean pan on the stove. I put the dirty pan in the sink.
It is important to prepare your ingredients before you start cooking because it's easier to just put everything together instead of stopping every time to chop something you can just put it together.