What's the difference between flipside and verso?

Flipside


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) It's the demented flipside of David Guetta bringing Euro house into the mainstream.
  • (2) This is not an argument for the status quo: teaching must be given greater priority within HE, but the flipside has to be an understanding on the part of students, ministers, officials, the public and the media that academics (just like politicians) cannot make everyone happy all of the time.
  • (3) The flipside of the review is that a number of core BBC services are likely to benefit from millions of pounds of investment in areas including quality drama, children's shows and overseas journalism.
  • (4) Third, on the flipside, tapering may be so modest that it will barely be noticed by consumers and businesses out in the real economy, away from the frenzy of Wall Street.
  • (5) Higher gilt yields – the flipside of falling bond prices – increase the cost of borrowing for the government and tend to push up interest rates across the economy, which could jeopardise economic recovery.
  • (6) The flipside is that those athletes who are closest to him will be bereft.
  • (7) The flipside of austerity was supposed to be a fundamental rebalancing of the economy.
  • (8) The flipside to the weakness of sterling is that Britain's exports are cheaper, but such is the shrivelled state of the country's manufacturing base that the balance of trade is still heavily in the red.
  • (9) Knitting and sewing take place at its Los Angeles HQ, and it boasts an enviable benefits package for its workers (on the flipside, CEO Dov Charney has been dogged by accusations of alleged sexual harassment, which throws up its own ethical quandaries).
  • (10) Yarl’s Wood is the flipside of the migrant crisis: its existence shows that many migrants who arrive in the UK ( a negligible proportion of migrants globally) are not free to threaten our “standard of living”, as Philip Hammond would have it .
  • (11) Arsène Wenger rejects Gary Neville attack after Arsenal-Liverpool 0-0 Read more On the flipside a case can also be made that Arsenal, for all their shortcomings, could conceivably have pulled off a perplexing and eccentric victory.
  • (12) After training, a couple of the players sit down and reveal the flipside of their money-no-object world: huge pressure.
  • (13) But the flipside was that I often felt I had lost my butchness.
  • (14) But the flipside of living longer is being exposed to the cruel, creeping, degenerative diseases of old age – certain cancers, or Alzheimer's, or Parkinson's – which we might once have escaped by the admittedly double-edged trick of succumbing to something else first.
  • (15) The flipside is the quiet approval and social plaudits afforded to women who perform a nurturing, maternal role.
  • (16) The flipside for Arsenal is that it is not a bad thing for a team to avoid defeat on the days when they struggle to be at their more cohesive and Wenger can be hugely encouraged by the fact Giroud’s late feat of escapology means they have lost only one of their last 22 top-division fixtures.
  • (17) But the damaging flipside of a low oil price was provided by a now besieged North Sea oil and gas industry, which said the price slump was causing major problems.
  • (18) She has also become aware of the "flipside" through her Antigone Foundation, which funds charities working in healthcare and education.
  • (19) "Animal welfare is an absolutely crucial flipside to the patient benefit argument, but what we're worried about is that we're going to end up with EU-led legislation which essentially piles a whole load of bureaucracy on the shoulders of busy scientists and ends up not doing anything at all for animal welfare, and delays potentially life-saving research."
  • (20) If we expect self-employed childminders to pass on at least some of the benefits of taking on an extra toddler through lower prices, the flipside for them is onerous new responsibilities and a dramatic increase in productivity, for a fraction more pay.

Verso


Definition:

  • (n.) The reverse, or left-hand, page of a book or a folded sheet of paper; -- opposed to recto.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) For electron microscopy, the immunogold procedure was applied to sections of lowicryl-embedded samples; simultaneous detection of GABA- and TH-immunoreactivities was enabled by recto-verso double labelling with gold particles of distinct diameters.
  • (2) It is published by Verso priced £25, and is available from the Guardian bookshop for £20.50 including free UK p&p .
  • (3) Verso , for example, sells ebooks directly, many at a great discount, and also offers a free ebook download when customers buy a printed copy.
  • (4) This is an edited extract from The Revenge of History: the Battle for the 21st Century by Seumas Milne, published by Verso.
  • (5) Robin Verso, the Warwickshire probation trust chairman, has told the Tory minister that the risks involved in the current timetable for outsourcing 70% of the probation service's workload are unacceptable: "Our assessment is that performance is bound to be damaged and that public protection failures will inevitably increase."
  • (6) Living in the End Times is published on 5 July by Verso, £20.
  • (7) The Dilemmas of Lenin by Tariq Ali is published by Verso, priced £16.99.
  • (8) Hill was honoured by an OUP festschrift, Puritans And Revolutionaries, when he retired from Balliol in 1978, and Verso published a series of tributes and criticisms, Reviving The English Revolution, 10 years later.
  • (9) I suppose we have nothing more to lose.” Comradely Greetings: The Prison Letters of Nadya and Slavoj by Nadya Tolokonnikova and Slavoj Žižek is published on September 30 (Verso Books).
  • (10) · Franco Moretti's Graphs, Maps, Trees: Abstract Models for a Literary Theory is published by Verso (£20)
  • (11) Hollow Land: Israel’s Architecture of Occupation by Eyal Weizman is published by Verso.
  • (12) • Tariq Ali ’s The Dilemmas of Lenin: Terrorism, War, Empire, Love, Rebellion is published next month by Verso.
  • (13) Paul Mason's book Why It's Kicking Off Everywhere is published by Verso in January
  • (14) But a recent Verso survey estimated that barely 12% of books are discovered from social networks whereas 50% are passed on via personal recommendations.
  • (15) Application of a double, recto-verso, immunogold labelling method in electron microscopy revealed systematic colocalization of GABA and tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunoreactivities in the axons innervating the intermediate lobe; in the neural lobe, almost all GABA-immunoreactive axons were also labelled for TH.
  • (16) This dream was the backdrop to my novel Fear of Mirrors , which I began writing soon after the fall of the Berlin Wall ( and has been recently republished by Verso ).
  • (17) • The new and updated edition of James Meek’s Private Island: Why Britain Now Belongs To Someone Else, shortlisted for the Orwell prize, is out now from Verso at £8.99 rrp.
  • (18) Radical Cities: Across Latin America in Search of a New Architecture , by Justin McGuirk, is published by Verso • The tragedy of Tampico: a city of violence, abandoned to the trees
  • (19) His latest book is Inequality and the 1%, published by Verso
  • (20) Her book Dispatches from the Dark Side is published by Verso at £9.99.

Words possibly related to "flipside"

Words possibly related to "verso"