Article: Doing so will open your LinkedIn Home page if you're logged in. If you're not automatically logged in, enter your user name and password and click on Sign In. It's in the top left corner of the LinkedIn page. This should be the person whom you intend to block. It will appear below the Search bar as you type. It's to the right of your selected user's profile picture near the top of the page. This option is roughly halfway down the window that pops up here. It's the first option on this page. Doing so will confirm your choice and block the person from viewing your LinkedIn profile.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Open the LinkedIn webpage. Click the Search bar. Type in the person's name. Click the person's name. Click the "..." button. Click Report/Block. Click Block [Name]. Click Block.
Article: You will need a miter saw to cut the trim at an angle and form a corner. Miter saws have adjustable bases you set to the angle you wish to cut. For the initial angle, turn the base clockwise until the saw points to the 45-degree angle mark, which you can see on the angle gauge beneath the base. Then, position the edge of the trim to the left of the saw blade, holding it firmly against the built-in metal fence for stability as you cut.  This piece will typically fit on the left-hand side. All of the trim around windows and doors forms outside corners. Think of a picture frame. Some baseboard and crown molding installation involves outside corners as well. Outside corners generally consist of single pieces of trim connected together. For long walls, you can glue or nail longer pieces of trim to the corner pieces you cut. To create the mating piece of trim, the angle gauge needs to point to the exact opposite angle from what you used earlier. If you look on the gauge, you should see a second “45” to the right. Turn the saw to point to it, hold the trim to the right of the blade, then cut through it.  This piece will typically fit on the right-hand side. For trim with multiple corners, such as the top and bottom pieces framing a window, cut the opposite end of the original trim. When you push the mitered edges together, they will connect seamlessly. To get a better sense of this, hold the trim up against the wall corner where you plan on installing them. Then, redo the miter cuts as needed to create the perfect corner angle. The cut edges should fall exactly on the corner of your wall, door, or window. You can quickly cut the trim down to size by making a square cut with a miter saw. Use the 0-degree setting on the miter to slice through the ends of the trim opposite of the miter cuts. Then, install the trim and fill the gaps with caulk. You can apply caulk with a caulk gun. Place the nozzle near the gap you need to fill, then gradually move the it along the gap while holding down the gun's trigger.  You can also nail the boards in place for additional stability. Position 2.5 in (6.4 cm) finish nails about every 16 in (41 cm) along the trim. If the boards don't connect cleanly or rest flat against the wall, caulk can cover up the imperfections. You can paint caulk the same color as the trim so anyone who comes into your home is hard-pressed to spot the flaws in the miter cut.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Slice a trim board at a 45-degree angle. Rotate the saw to slice the second piece of trim. Test the mitered pieces by connecting them. Trim the pieces to length and fill in gaps with paintable silicone caulk.
Article: Fill a small saucepan or tea kettle with 1 cup (250 ml) of purified water. Set the pan on the stove and bring the water to a steady boil. Rinse the parsley root under cool, running water, then use a sharp kitchen knife to roughly chop 1 to 2 Tbsp (15 to 30 ml) of parsley root.  While you can technically use the roots of leaf parsley, it's more common to use Hamburg root parsley, a separate cultivar with a much thicker root that resembles a white carrot. If the parsley root appears dirty, rinse it under cool, running water and scrub away as much dirt as possible. You can also peel the root, but doing so isn't usually necessary. Place the chopped parsley root in the bottom of one teacup. Pour the water into the same cup, then steep the tea for about 10 minutes. The taste of parsley root tea is somewhat milder when compared to parsley leaf tea, so it's usually best to wait the full 10 minutes to allow the flavor to develop. You can adjust this time to your personal tastes, however. Pour the contents of the teacup through a fine mesh strainer, catching the pieces of chopped parsley root inside. Collect the liquid tea in a separate teacup. Drink the parsley root tea immediately. You can serve it sweetened or unsweetened. Consider using raw sugar or locally sourced honey in your tea for greater health benefits.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Boil the water. Chop the parsley root. Steep the parsley root for 10 minutes. Strain the solid pieces. Enjoy.