The Charlotte Real Estate Network
A social network for real estate professionals and consumers
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Added by Rob Armstrong
Started by Donna Frasca • Color Specialist in General Sep 30.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Jul 13.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Jul 13.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Jul 13.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Jul 13.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Jul 13.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Jul 13.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Jul 13.
Started by Sonya Leonard in House for Sale May 8.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Apr 7.
Started by Craig LePage in House for Sale Apr 1.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Apr 1.
Started by Craig LePage in House for Sale Apr 1.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Apr 1.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Apr 1.
Started by Craig LePage in Land for Sale Apr 1.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Apr 1.
Started by Rob Armstrong in House for Sale Apr 1.
Started by Craig LePage in House for Sale Apr 1.
Started by Craig LePage in House for Sale Apr 1.
Posted by Shanelle Wintercrest on November 9, 2009 at 7:57am
Posted by Rob Armstrong on November 8, 2009 at 6:21pm
Posted by Rob Armstrong on November 8, 2009 at 3:27pm
Started by Shanelle Wintercrest in General 10 hours ago.
Started by Richard Preston in General. Last reply by Richard Preston Oct 22.
Started by Ryan Kailbourne in General Oct 13.
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 09, 2009 is:
docile • \DAH-sul\ • adjective
1 : easily taught *2 : easily led or managed
Example sentence:
"Quite docile and harmless was Billy, and it was pitiful to see how hard he tried to learn, as if groping dimly after the lost knowledge which had cost him so much." (Louisa May Alcott, Little Men)
Did you know?
Docile students can make teaching a lot easier. Nowadays, calling students "docile" indicates they aren't trouble-makers. But there's more than just good behavior connecting docility to teachability. The original meaning of "docile" is more to the point: "readily absorbing something taught." "The docile mind may soon thy precepts know," rendered Ben Jonson, for example, in a 17th-century translation of the Roman poet Horace. "Docile" comes from Latin "docēre," which means "to teach." Other descendants of "docēre" include "doctrine" (which can mean "something that is taught"), "document" (the earliest meaning of which was "instruction"), and "doctor" and "docent" (both of which can refer to college teachers).
*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
Created by Richard Preston Jan 31, 2009 at 2:14pm. Last updated by Richard Preston Feb 9.
Created by Richard Preston Jan 31, 2009 at 2:16pm. Last updated by Richard Preston Feb 6.
Created by Richard Preston Jan 31, 2009 at 2:15pm. Last updated by Richard Preston Feb 6.
Created by Richard Preston Feb 4, 2009 at 3:01pm. Last updated by Richard Preston Feb 4.
Created by Richard Preston Jan 31, 2009 at 2:07pm. Last updated by Richard Preston Jan 31.
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