Sentences with phrase «as somebody»

In collections court, you have the courts garnishing one person's wages after the next and then as soon as somebody comes in there with a defense attorney, you win the case.
And if you do show up as somebody who's highly driven, I would recommend you take it.
So from the interactions with officials and the understanding of my mother as somebody seriously affected and interested in all the repercussions, the impression was that being born in the U.S. was a requirement for becoming a U.S. president.
We didn't really intentionally assign it to the women, we just associate with that person the kinds of skills and talents that make a better fundraiser or a better party planner or whatever, and somebody needs to call us out on it, but as soon as somebody does we tend to get defensive.
And one of you has identified the other as somebody who is worth engaging with, and so there's usually an ask in there somewhere.
A SNOOT can be defined as somebody who knows what dysphemism means and doesn't mind letting you know it... [But the] very most pathetic and dangerous sort of SNOOT [is] the SNOOT Who Is Wrong.»
As a somebody who just bought a not - yet - out - of - the - box - iPad, I'd like those people with iPads with WiFi, who have hands big enough to palm beachballs, to hold the iPad in the way that causes the iPhone problem.
Sam Glover: Maybe even come up with some excuses to try cases if it's a close call, so that you can build your reputation as somebody who follows through so that it's going to be expensive even if they win.
Among other things, Gibbs shared that Obama is likely to look at candidates for «diversity in background,» as well as somebody with a record of excellence, integrity and who understands «how being a judge affects Americans» everyday lives.
You have to be joined up, so that one person, in one team, in one office, sees and feels the same treatment as somebody in another, which is pretty hard to do, but we work very hard at it.»
As somebody said, it almost looks like a climate phase change at 1950 or something.
And expert has been well defined as somebody who knows the basic mistakes in their field, and how to avoid them.
Regarding your complaint about the excessive referencing to my own articles I can only tell, that as soon as somebody else is willing to compute and write articles on the tau and the analytical relationships among the atmospheric radiative fluxes, I shall be happy to reference them.
When you said «What we KNOW is that CO2 is a greenhouse gas, much less important than water vapor,», you don't understand, or won't understand, AGW; as somebody said, a stressed denier.
Your troll at angrybearblog.com doesn't come across to me as somebody with much between the ears.
And it's also a bit of a dog whistle; we're parsing the statement carefully and literally, whereas other sorts of readers will happily take it as somebody with credentials saying that warming has stopped.
TOM TURRENTINE, Director, PHEV Research Center, University of California at Davis, in the final remarks at the conference, said, «We also heard from Andy Grove just how serious energy security is — as somebody who actually grew up behind the Iron Curtain for a few years and has a certain perspective on what happens in a crisis.»
First, this «Senior White House official» doesn't strike me as somebody who knows bloody much about energy or climate or the environment.
Well, I don't know if it is so and if it holds quantitatively but this, may be naïve, explanation seems to be logical to me, at least as long as somebody comes with a better explanation.
Here in Northern NSW a coastal environmentalist is defined as somebody who already owns his beach house.
You — as somebody involved in this professionally — may have some specific meaning that you are so used to that you never even notice it.
As somebody who also does statistical analysis, I find your work very impressive.
«Calling a spade a spade» as somebody on your side of the debate said somewhere along the line.
ephemera: So how do you see your own role, as somebody working within the media and also then raising these questions concerning the political and economic constitution of the media and the state?
As long as somebody can over control and generate surplus allowances to subsidize their control investments then allowances should be available on the market for use if control costs are not cost - effective at a particular affected sources.
I come at this as a uneducated layman, a lurker and as somebody who has been very interested and involved in a peripheral way in «Science» for over 50 years.
As somebody who happens to believe that sensitivity is between 1.5 and 4.5, I am hoping that nic is wrong.
Further, qualifications, as somebody above pointed out, do matter.
To do so, it is absolutely essential that when you comment on things, you make it 100 % clear when you are commenting as a scientist speaking from your area of expertise, and when you are commenting as somebody who is perhaps knowledgeable but not expert.
(And as somebody who has actually taught systems thinking, it is beholden on me to point out that the concept described as «Systemic Causation» in Curry's quote of Lakoff is completely nonsensical.
As somebody who has given over 70 presentations about climate change to public audiences over the last several years (and who shared lessons from this experience at AGU in 2015), I think these principles are excellent guidance.
As somebody once said: «If you can't take the heat, get out of the kitchen.»
The Duchampian sculptures are cymbals with bells attached, that sound as somebody passes by.
You mentioned Sean Scully as somebody whose work interested you... your works are highly finished yet the facture is evidenced in a reductive way.
We live in a world of many parallel realities, and as [Robert] Ryman once said, as long as somebody paints, painting will never be dead.
Interviewed for Apollo magazine, the artist described how Giacometti's work has influenced her own: «He's one of my favorite artists, so it was insightful for Philipp to choose me because I don't always think it's so explicit in my work... I've been thinking about Giacometti a lot as somebody who has an interesting sense of the space between objects, or the suggested space around objects...»
And then there is the group, but much looser, that gravitates perhaps around Bob, (Rauschenberg), but so many other elements that have nothing to do with painting gravitate around him that one doesn't know exactly whether he functions more as a painter or as somebody who is involved in other activities — theatre, dance, etc..
As long as somebody's preoccupation with their own drama doesn't blind them to the importance of other things, I can forgive them for it.
As somebody who's in the space hacking business, this Facebook article excited me.
Yeah, as somebody who's been watching advertising closely for over a decade, I think it's pretty huge.
As somebody in the ad business, I find the implications staggering.
As somebody who spent a lot of...
As somebody who grew up when copies of the tabletop game were hard to come by, I appreciated the first Full Control Space Hulk for its faithfulness.
This can either out them completely as a traitor or as somebody you can trust, for that floor at least.
As somebody who spent the better portion of their childhood in the arcades, this critic's brow can't help but furrow when reading about the latest brawlers and slashers.
«This, for me, as a gamer and as somebody who cares so much about the brand, has been the hardest thing about not leaking it,» he says.
It proves fairly earth shattering for the multiplayer, as somebody invariably ends up with the shit end of the stick and loses.
As somebody who's frequently late to everything and spends most nights wondering where the day went, it often gets my ire when a game imposes a restrictive time limit.
The sound effects, sadly, are rather weak, especially the one when your character takes damage, which could probably be best described as somebody punching aluminum foil.
I played through part of the planet Kerwan (where you must leap between boxes on a moving train) and as somebody who loved Ratchet and Clank on the PS2 when I was a kid, this new edition was an exciting, nostalgic experience, while also being an entirely new game.
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