Now you just half to wait for their response. It's never easy waiting.Now you just half to wait for their response. It's never easy waiting.Now you just half to wait for their response. It's never easy waiting.Now you just half to wait for their response. It's never easy waiting.Now you just half to wait for their response. It's never easy waiting.Now you just half to wait for their response. It's never easy waiting.
Basically it is a response to a paragraph (or more) of text. The response may come in the form of an essay or simply just questions.
A response that is used by talking (I'm just using my previous knowledge of these 2 words to hint at a possibly correct response.)
When someone says "no response is also a response," they mean that choosing not to reply or react to a situation or message can convey a message or signal just as effectively as giving a direct response.
Well, just about anything, actually. Most of his lines if not all of them are in response to something.
Explanatory and Response variables are just fancy words for independent and dependent variables. Explanatory is the independent variable and response is the dependent variable.
he didn't necessarily have a response to overproduction. overproduction was just one of the many causes of the depression itself.
Yes, it being sarcastic
Response is to stimuli as reaction is to trigger. A reaction is an action taken in response to a trigger or stimulus, showing a direct cause-and-effect relationship. Just as a response is elicited by a stimulus, a reaction is elicited by a trigger.
That's not an idiom, it's just a statement. Someone is saying they got no response to a question or action.
When sending a wedding invitation the response card should go into the response envelope and you should address it back to you on the front of the response envelope with a stamp on the envelope.
just a phrase or tune which is then repeated. Call and echo - Repeating the tune which was played Call and response - After the tune, a different tune plays in response to the first tune.