Similar words: neon, neonatal, monotonously, monotonous, neo, igneous, eon, erroneous. Meaning: adj. 1. directly between two individuals 2. being a system of play in which an individual defensive player guards an individual offensive player. adv. (of two persons) in direct encounter.
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1. Virtually all instruction is in small groups or one-on-one.
2. Talking one-on-one with people is not his idea of fun.
3. Holloway was beaten in a one-on-one with Miklosko just before half-time.
4. Slip it in during one-on-one conversations.
5. Skiers are almost one-on-one with an instructor.
6. Kids need one-on-one attention.
7. Though the literature on organizational politics has emphasized one-on-one relationship building, my research moves the emphasis to the coalition.
8. There were no blurry eyes, no one-on-one sessions with the assistant coaches in a remote corner.
9. This might be any of one-on-one, discussion, drawing etc.
10. Get one-on-one help from product experts at Office Hours.
11. This girl is taught one-on-one by several teachers because she is the only pupil in her class.
12. Little kids, especially ages 2 through 5, need one-on-one interaction with an effective teacher.
13. Maybe it was the one-on-one interactions you enjoyed and your communication skills were your greatest sales asset.
14. Asia Catalyst will select one IDU group for one-on-one coaching in the organization's office, to help the IDU group to master basic research skills.
15. "Targeted programmes with one-on-one attention are what these young people need," believes Paul Brown, a director of the Prince's Trust.
16. Journalists may request one-on-one interviews with Ministers, and representatives of other organizations, after the meeting.
17. The price includes 10 hours each month of one-on-one live support and a course adviser.
18. Often, the employer just called in the drivers and bargained with them directly, one-on-one.
19. This would be a nice place to come if we just wanted to have a one-on-one chat.
20. Joe sized up Louis Johnson in May, when the secretary invited him to a long one-on-one dinner.
21. He created the classroom method of teaching, as opposed to one-on-one instruction, then founded numerous schools.
22. Undecided House members have been summoned to the Oval Office for coveted one-on-one chats with the chief executive.
23. After Boston dribbled the ball off his foot and out of bounds, Bailey took Jason Hamilton one-on-one.
24. Although the secret-key method is quite feasible and practical for one-on-one document interchange, it does not scale.
25. Business, government, and academia must work together and provide each participant with one-on-one contact and support.
26. I suggested to him that I wanted to meet his customer one-on-one.
27. She was understanding and encouraging, and let me give her my speech one-on-one, and the next time I had to give a speech, I did much better.
27. Wish you can benefit from sentencedict.com and make progress everyday!
28. Albert Gore Jr. apparently ready to fall by the wayside – he can focus on Jesse Jackson one-on-one.
29. He spent Monday selling the changes to shareholders and said that he was 'hearing a lot of appreciation, ' adding that it was easier to communicate his vision in one-on-one meetings.
30. All members of line supervision from the Construction Director to Foremen are expected to conduct regular one-on-one personal contacts with employees within their area of responsibility.
More similar words: neon, neonatal, monotonously, monotonous, neo, igneous, eon, erroneous, neoprene, neophyte, aeon, peon, none other than, neologism, neolithic, peony, come on, lie on, thereon, erroneously, neoclassic, extraneous, move on, give on, live on, have on, pigeon, take on, ride on, someone.