![]() ![]() #1: An entrepreneur with a money-making idea, but not sure where to start Let’s dive into a few of the most common requests for planning that I receive from my clients at the Nevada SBDC, and some important factors to consider. Every business owner has different goals and priorities that drive the purpose of their business plan. Today’s successful entrepreneurs have done yesterday’s hard work: setting goals, designing action plans to reach them, and building plans for growth based on measurable metrics. Print journalism attested from 1962, as distinguished from the television variety.Perhaps now, more than ever before, the importance of Planning in Small Business is at the forefront of sustainability factors. In Middle English, stigmata were called precious prentes of crist to perceiven the print of sight was "to feel (someone's) gaze." Out of print "no longer to be had from the publisher" is from 1670s (to be in print "in printed form" is recorded from late 15c.). Meaning "piece of printed cloth or fabric" is from 1756. The sense of "picture or design from a block or plate" is attested from 1660s. The meaning "printed lettering" is from 1620s print-hand "print-like handwriting" is from 1650s. Sense of "a printed publication" (later especially a newspaper) is from 1560s. The Old French word also was borrowed into Middle Dutch ( prente, Dutch prent) and other Germanic languages. past participle of preindre "to press, crush," altered from prembre, from Latin premere "to press, hold fast, cover, crowd, compress" (from PIE root *per- (4) "to strike"). 1300, prente, "impression, mark made by impression upon a surface" (as by a stamp or seal), from Old French preinte "impression," noun use of fem. Delaware has been the Blue Hen State at least since 1830, supposedly from a nickname of its regiments in the Revolutionary War.Ĭ. Blue streak, of something resembling a bolt of lightning (for quickness, intensity, etc.) is from 1830, Kentucky slang. Blue water "the open ocean" is from 1822. Blue whale is attested from 1851, so called for its color. For blue ribbon see cordon bleu under cordon. ![]() ![]() The fabulous story of Blue-beard, who kept his murdered wives in a locked room, is in English from 1798. īlue pencil as an editor's characteristic tool to mark corrections in copy is from 1885 also as a verb from 1885. Expressive alike of the utmost contempt, as of all that men hold dearest and love best, its manifold combinations, in ever varying shades of meaning, greet the philologist at every turn. Few words enter more largely into the composition of slang, and colloquialisms bordering on slang, than does the word BLUE. In some phrases, such as blue murder, it appears to be merely intensive. Of women, "learned, pedantic," by 1788 (see bluestocking). 1400, perhaps from the "livid" sense and implying a bruised heart or feelings. The figurative meaning "sad, sorrowful, afflicted with low spirits" is from c. The color of constancy since Chaucer at least, but apparently for no deeper reason than the rhyme in true blue (c. The sense "lead-colored, blackish-blue, darkened as if by bruising" is perhaps by way of the Old Norse cognate bla "livid, lead-colored." It is the meaning in black and blue, and blue in the face "livid with effort" (1864, earlier black and blue in the face, 1829). ![]() The present spelling in English is since 16c., common from c. bla is also 'yellow,' whereas the Scandinavian words may refer esp. term applies varies in the older dialects M.H.G. Many Indo-European languages seem to have had a word to describe the color of the sea, encompassing blue and green and gray such as Irish glass (from PIE root *ghel- (2) "to shine,") Old English hæwen "blue, gray," related to har (see hoar) Serbo-Croatian sinji "gray-blue, sea-green " Lithuanian šyvas, Russian sivyj "gray." The exact color to which the Gmc. The same PIE root yielded Latin flavus "yellow," Old Spanish blavo "yellowish-gray," Greek phalos "white," Welsh blawr "gray," showing the slipperiness of definition in Indo-European color-words. This is from PIE *bhle-was "light-colored, blue, blond, yellow," from root *bhel- (1) "to shine, flash, burn," also "shining white" and forming words for bright colors. 1300, bleu, blwe, etc., "sky-colored," also "livid, lead-colored," from Old French blo, bleu "pale, pallid, wan, light-colored blond discolored blue, blue-gray," from Frankish *blao or some other Germanic source, from Proto-Germanic *blæwaz (source also of Old English blaw, Old Saxon and Old High German blao, Danish blaa, Swedish blå, Old Frisian blau, Middle Dutch bla, Dutch blauw, German blau "blue"). ![]()
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