Frankly little we read surprised us.
Not exact matches
Reading and responding to emails, working on posts and doing other blog related business have left me with
little time or desire,
frankly to do any real recipe development.
Next time
read a
little bit or don't comment because saying I'm telling people what to think when that never happened is obviously wrong and
frankly a waste of time for everybody involved.
Until he stops looking for clever
little «gotchas» on Cuomo and starts talking about what he can do for us — really do for us on issues we really care about — good Republicans like me will continue to click past stories that feature his name in the headline because
frankly, we're too discouraged to even
read them anymore.
When I
read this statement in the content frameworks of one of the consortia now creating assessments for the Common Core State Standards, I was
frankly a
little insulted.
And I try to be grateful for every bit of feedback I get in turn, because
frankly, what we do — putting
little marks on a piece of paper or a screen, and having other people
read those marks and make movies in their head — is magical.
And
frankly, their statements amount to
little more than «I just
read this for 10 minutes yesterday, and there's nothing * obviously * stupid».