How To Use Factoid In A Sentence

  • Over several days, here and at other companies, I hear this factoid repeated like a campaign talking point.
  • One of most important and satisfying factoids I have ever learned is that while squirrels may cache fifty pounds of nuts in a year that half are lost to the squirrel because they forget where they put them.
  • Billions of virus-like packets of little news factoids fly around the net, and people intercept packets that meet criteria of interest.
  • So Bret Stephens is brain-dead, his conscience and journalistic competence freeze-dried one devastating scientific misapprehension, misquotation and kited factoid at a time. The sadists, the masochists and the scientists
  • But these non-newsworthy-factoids have spawned appallingly simple-minded reflections.
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  • There's also an enjoyable trivia track that serves up Pop-Up Video-style factoids about both the movie and the social environment it depicts.
  • A little-known factoid shows that roughly 90 percent of all worldwide markets (in population terms) are located outside the United States.
  • When Michael Jackson died, the media put on auto-repeat the factoid that his 1982 opus Forbes.com: News
  • Scruton is generally not a writer I'd wish to be heard quoting, but whatever else he may be, he's no slouch when it comes to wine, and the first part of the book combines a memoir of his development as a "wino" (his word) with some useful tips and unexpected factoids. Books news, reviews and author interviews | guardian.co.uk
  • What would be overripe overplotting in lesser hands becomes wonderfully credible here, with cleverly drawn characters (Paz and his most excellent mum must surely return), trunkloads of ethno-botanical factoids, and interspersed sections from Jane’s African logbook. Tropic of Night: Summary and book reviews of Tropic of Night by Michael Gruber.
  • Digital scolds bemoan tweeting as the ultimate signifier of our busted attention spans, but old-timey newspapers used to run randomized factoidal gibberish like this by the yard. Chicago Reader
  • When you see a statistic or factoid offered by the media, always remember to play ‘Jeopardy’ with it and ask yourself, to what question is this an answer?
  • One of most important and satisfying factoids I have ever learned is that while squirrels may cache fifty pounds of nuts in a year that half are lost to the squirrel because they forget where they put them.
  • But these non-newsworthy-factoids have spawned appallingly simple-minded reflections.
  • I don't know whether this item is a fact, or a factoid.
  • Watch how factoids and information overload are used to blur the line between crises and light news, so that every event becomes a panic situation.
  • Also never-ending are the bizarre factoids associated with ol’ Humpy.
  • She hasn't crossed any lines in the speech yet, just a lame "truthy" factoid about popular vote (which is BS) is all so far. Obama To Declare Victory: "Our Primary Season Has Finally Come To An End"
  • This was interesting because it meant that the people in whiteface on the Library Mall must be members of Terminal Theater, the legendary factoidal group whose name, even, was subject to conjecture, or was an aspect, perhaps, of the group’s borderline existence. Underworld
  • In just a few hundred words, his article combines smears, factoids and plain foolishness in a thick stew of slavish political partisanship. Archive 2009-08-01
  • There is also the stereotyped factoid that the original owners made a ‘canny Scots decision when they purchased second-hand gin stills from a London gin distiller’.
  • But why, you may ask, has this apparently trivial factoid ruffled the feathers of the good burghers of Oslo?
  • Brief drama snippets and tiny factoids, that's all we get these days.
  • I think the movie is at its best when it's being a) clever and funny or b) bringing to light factoids that aren't very well known.
  • It's not that data is scarce; quite the reverse, there's an ocean of factoids, but having the relevant facts in one place and making sense of them is not as straightforward a proposition as it might seem.
  • The party was being given by a writer, Truman Capote, for a publisher, Katharine Graham, and the factoidal data generated by the guests would surely bridge the narrowing gap between journalism and fiction. Underworld
  • The site has work sheets and activities that can be printed off as well as a factoid on the maths page, which gives a different fact each time the page is loaded.
  • And then, again, just before heading down, we were told the brickwork is the finest in the world—factoids mentioned, I guess, so that we would concentrate more on the bricks than on what was floating past. Flushed
  • There is another way to weigh this trend, however: maybe readers and viewers are not so much growing insular as searching for meaning in a vast universe of fact and factoid, and embracing a political bent is one way of organizing it.
  • Purge the brain of factoids and start real life again, get with some real writing, read a real book.
  • A repetitive set-top game called Search for the Spear of Destiny requires a beginner's level of dexterity, and delivers trivial lost-civilization factoids as reward cookies for successful play.
  • That's just one apocryphal Bergman factoid (Webster's dates "dramaturg" back to 1870) that theater producer Andrew Higgie has collected over the half dozen years it has taken him to get the filmmaker's "Through a Glass Darkly" screenplay up and running as a stage play at London's Variety.com
  • Along with the spells, charms, incantations, and potion recipes, there were manuals, instructions, factoids, magical messages, and even stories.
  • Tangential factoids, unrhymed chiming, and wanton speculation: New York Times book reviewer Michiko Kakutani is somehat, er, somewhat known for her frequent use of the word limn, apparently it's an inside joke among writers and critics. Languagehat.com: THE PERILS OF A FANCY VOCABULARY.
  • I'm informed from a usually reliable source that a factoid is an empirical claim that is often repeated but is in fact false.
  • This is a fairly well-known factoid in alternative news media.
  • He marshalls tabloidesque factoids, the grislier the better as truth such as the tale of the Palestinian girl. On Thursday, the Legg report will be published along with...
  • And on and on he goes like that for two pages of second hand factoids and observations that never rise above the pseudo-intellectual.
  • This book contains many factoids that were useful with respect to my professional needs, but the most memorable paragraph for me is this one.
  • And if you're a longtime fan, the biography helps explain the inner workings of the band and offers factoids you can use to, ahem, impress your friends.
  • Wilco, you are bemoaning the response to Blair… I interpret the show me the links the same as I interpret the Show me the links when a right winger posts some far out “factoidal” information here. Think Progress » ThinkFast: January 16, 2007
  • The writing in this magazine - mostly by scientists - is stellar, and there's a fantastic mix of long features and short factoids about science.
  • This is the McGill Trivia Club, an organization dedicated to the most worthy pastime of answering difficult questions based on factoids from a wide range of categories.
  •    The other factoid worth noting about the Hetian blast is that it took place in 1999 — two years before 9/11 made Washington and Beijing counterterrorist comrades-in-arms. The Usual Suspects?
  • Brief drama snippets and tiny factoids, that's all we get these days.
  • Unfortunately, he doles out information in tiny factoids and leaves long gaps of silence between them.
  • FACTOID: A keloid is an overgrowth of skin that forms during scarring. You Raising Your Child
  • Test your knowledge of their on-screen and off-screen triumphs, tragedies, and occasional tackiness by matching a dozen fun factoids with the correct diva.
  • Adopt an elephant. Factoid: Just like humans, elephants are known to experience feelings of grief and empathy.
  • Prices, timetables, documentation requirements, booking advice, and most any other factoid you could possibly need are perfectly intelligible and easy to find.
  • When does a piece of data go from being a factoid to being a fact?
  • That earth is #3 in distance from the sun is a factoid. A View: The Science=Atheism Meme
  • Adopt a beluga whale. Factoid: Long ago sailors nicknamed these whales "sea canaries" for their birdlike songs.

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