Sentences with phrase «more of our affinity»

Like you, I find more of an affinity with our millennial generation than with my fellow Builders or with «The Silent Generation» as some call us.
That's the etymology, but Nissan is betting the real attraction to the name for Canadians will be that we have more of an affinity for Europe, and so are a little more interested in what springs from the Old Country.
In some ways, Louis's immersive works seem to have more of an affinity with paintings by other Color Field artists like Newman and Rothko than they do with Frankenthaler's stains; they evoke sublime, magisterial experiences of caves and grottos (as in the somber «Curtain,» with its stalactitelike points) or waterfalls (in the luscious «Tet,» on loan from the Whitney Museum of American Art).
Image above: More of our affinity for black & white.

Not exact matches

But UPS» affinity for them is helping keep the planes alive, even if they are a tiny portion of Boeing's order book of more than 5,800 planes.
Travis Isaacson, senior director of organizational development at Access Development, a Salt Lake City, affinity marketing business, doesn't want anything that fancy, just an iPod Classic with 120 GB of memory instead of the old 80 GB model he has now so he can squeeze in more of the business books he downloads from Audible.com.
All this offers great opportunity to the adept marketer or sales professional to create emotional affinity, a deeper and more influential form of rapport.
One of the more notable themes in the world of exchange - traded funds last year was investors affinity for international equity funds.
Now we clearly need all of these, but my sense is that one is more healing, one is more liberating, one is more attune to the affinities of what our type actually really needs to begin to tell ourselves the truth.
Thus the Wesleyan tradition has an inherent affinity to historical process and movement, which puts it at odds with the more absolutistic traditions that try to deny relativity and the historical conditionedness of Christian life and thought.
But even the more conservative wings of the Wesleyan tradition (which because of their basically orthodox stance and their commitment to a «supernatural» articulation of Christian faith, have often felt some affinity with the fundamentalist wing of modem Protestantism) have not been able to find a home in the circles of either modem fundamentalism or more recently in neo-evangelicalism.
We find some affinity with some of the other Movements: like them we have grown and flourished though on a more modest scale and with a quite different style: we are much smaller, we are not international, we own no properties or schools, and our priests are all diocesan, working in parishes under the direction of their bishops.
There are nevertheless important differences that give the Christian nativity a more immediate affinity with the spirit and structure of comedy.
The apparent irrelevance of distance and the importance of particular personal affinities in the more striking stories about telepathy favor this interpretation.
And recent New Testament scholarship suggests that Jesus of Nazareth had much more affinity with this stream of thought than previously realized.
There is also the matter of philosophical affinity with its viewpoint, which is far and away more important.
With such major centers of the new evangelicalism as Fuller Seminary now showing a good deal more affinity to neo-orthodoxy than to fundamentalism (see Gerald T. Sheppard, «Biblical Hermeneutics: The Academic Language of Evangelical Identity,» Union Seminary Quarterly Review 32 [Winter 1977, pp. 81 - 94]-RRB-, surely we must be cautious both about assuming flatly a «decline» of classic liberalism and about implying a one - to - one relation between the liberal ideologies, whatever their current condition, and the oldline denominational structures.
I turn now to some of the more technical points of contrast and affinity between our two thinkers.
There truly is a strong affinity here to Santayana's idea of intent or animal faith as the way in which we turn dumbly to a reality beyond, whose character can only be more exactly specified for us by the essences which we intuit.
Even more, everything is animated with a flow of Presence and of Love — the spirit which, emanating from the supreme pole of personalization, fosters and nourishes the mutual affinity of individualities in process of convergence.
Christianity has far more affinity for some of the basic principles of communism than for the corresponding principles of capitalism.
«Mind» is more elusive: it can refer to anything from the generic subject of any possible judgement to the syndrome of affinities,....
I suggested that the very excess of external compression to which we are subjected by the relative contraction of our planet may one day cause us to breach that mysterious wall of growing repulsion which, more often than not, sets the human molecules in opposition to one another, and enter the powerful, still unknown field of our basic affinities.
At the same time, many old - style conservative evangelicals have warned that postliberal theology is but the latest manifestation of a deadly neo-orthodoxy, which is all the more pernicious for its seeming affinity with conservative aims.
Thus his vision, beginning with man accepting, affirming, even willing the death of God in a radical sense, ends with man willing to participate in the utter desolation of the secular or the profane, willing to undergo the discipline of darkness, the dark night of the soul (here Altizer's affinity with the religious existentialists, who may not have God but who don't at all like not having him, is clearest), while the possibility of a new epiphany of the sacred, a rebirth of the possibility of having God once more is awaited.
(cf. 18:20 and 14:11); Jeremiah's profound grief, 8:4 - 9:1; his affinity with Hosea, 13:16 27 but in many other passages as well; the certainty of destruction, 14:10 - 18; the quality of the «Confession» in 15:10 - 18 (as also elsewhere) that brings Jeremiah closer to us than any other figure in the Old Testament; the symbolic act again, chapter 19 — only Ezekiel among the prophets performs more such acts than Jeremiah; the bitterest of his confessions, 20:7 - 18, matched in the Old Testament only in Job (cf. Job 3); his association with Baruch in the remarkable narrative of chapter 36, «in the fourth year of Jehoiakim»; and his devastating words on Jehoiakim, 22: 13 - 19, bitter testimony to what was in Jeremiah's eyes the miserable rule of a miserable king.
And being united by affinities of character, they move with less impediment and more vigor than any other bodies can move, and constitute, no doubt, that form of the sacramental host by which Jesus Christ intends to give freedom to the world.49
As a result, I don't venture far outside of my comfort zone (see: living in a bubble and my affinity to Ron Swanson) when it comes to ordering drinks and will more often than not just order a beer.
Sprinkle with dried mint and a small pinch of Aleppo or more, depending on your affinity for heat.
TEMECULA VALLEY Southern California Wine Country - «With more winey restaurants than any other California wine region, Temecula Valley Southern California Wine Country's talented chefs expertly pair premium, award - winning varietals with fresh, local, seasonal, sustainably grown, farmed, and ranched foods in a celebration of natural affinity.
While the hotel's lobby bar, Cocktail Bar is already taking a modern, culinary approach to its cocktails by creating original craft drinks, Asay's affinity for and knowledge of microbrews will also make an appearance on the menu as well as some innovative approaches to New Orleans classics, such as cask - aging sazerac in an oak barrel for a more complex spirit — a process believed to be pioneered in Asay's hometown of Portland, Ore..
Of course when it comes to intoxication, we think of alcohol (kind of ironic, given the Irish affinity for a pub and a pint) but the meaning of this word comes with a lot more depth than what first comes to minOf course when it comes to intoxication, we think of alcohol (kind of ironic, given the Irish affinity for a pub and a pint) but the meaning of this word comes with a lot more depth than what first comes to minof alcohol (kind of ironic, given the Irish affinity for a pub and a pint) but the meaning of this word comes with a lot more depth than what first comes to minof ironic, given the Irish affinity for a pub and a pint) but the meaning of this word comes with a lot more depth than what first comes to minof this word comes with a lot more depth than what first comes to mind.
[80] Turning his attention once more to Parliament, Livingstone attempted to get selected as the Labour candidate for the constituency of Brent East, a place which he felt an «affinity» for and where several friends lived.
«I had to shame him into taking the subway a couple weeks ago,» Albanese said, referencing de Blasio's recent affinity for taking the subway more after having previously said it wasn't the best use of his time.
In particular a strong affinity is expressed by many of the authors with Catholic Social Thought (/ Teaching)(CST) about which more later.
«We compiled information from all the rodent species present at more than hundred fossil sites of Iberian Peninsula and the South of France, which allow us to statistically evaluate how this rodent communities were grouped based on their ecological affinities.
Dr. Uhlén founded the Science for Life Laboratory in Stockholm, Sweden, where he served as director from 2010 to 2015, and has authored more than 750 publications in bioscience with a focus on the development and use of affinity reagents in biotechnology and biomedicine.
More than 2,500 staff members — out of 18,000 total — participate in affinity groups at Amgen, which include the Amgen Asian Association, Amgen Black Employees Network, Amgen DisAbled Employees Network, Amgen Latin Employees Network, Amgen Middle Eastern Employees Network, Amgen Network for Gay and Lesbian Employees, and Amgen Women's Interactive Network.
Jena had already been working for more than five years on superhalogens, a class of molecules that mimic the chemistry of halogens but have electron affinities that are much larger than that of the halogen atoms.
Conducted by Zainab Ngaini and colleagues at the Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, the study found that when sago waste (consisting primarily of cellulose and lignin) is chemically modified using fatty acid derivatives, the resulting material is more hydrophobic than untreated sago waste, implying that it has less affinity for water and an excellent affinity for oil.
While most B cells have a low affinity for pathogens, which might effectively fend off a relatively mild virus, Tfh (with the stimulation of ICOS) allows the select few that produce highly specific and more strongly reactive antibodies to proliferate and outcompete their less specific brethren.
Best of all, the derivatives were even more effective than the original compound, without leading to that worrisome estrogenic metabolite or showing much affinity themselves for estrogen receptors.
Viktor Hamburger of Washington University extended Harrison's work but chose to study the chick embryo because its nervous system, although more complex than that of an amphibian, lends itself better to experimental analysis: its nerve centers are more clearly delineated and their strong affinity for silver stain enables the experimenter to visually examine the nerve structures more easily.
The study also resolves the affinities of other emblematic fossils from Canada's Burgess Shale more than a hundred years after their discovery.
Rabbit monoclonals provide better antigen recognition because the rabbit immune system generates antibody diversity, and optimizes affinity by mechanisms that are more efficient than those of mice and other rodents.
The InterPlay Adenoviral TAP System combines our unique tandem affinity purification (TAP) system with our exclusive adenoviral gene delivery system, the AdEasy Adenoviral Vector System, for enhanced gene delivery to a broader range of mam... Read more...
Furthermore, our identified RIPK2 inhibitors appear to have more affinity for the active site of RIPK2 than others, are more efficacious at inhibition of proliferation, and can effectively resolve lung inflammation and intestinal inflammation more robustly than gefitinib (Fig. 6B; Table 2).
Now, because of I124 - chlor's affinity for pancreatic cancer over normal tissues, we can use it in place of FDG to get a more accurate map of the whereabouts of cancer cells.»
Longer intervals between doses of vitamin D2 will result in large fluctuations of serum 25 (OH) D concentrations (due to more rapid metabolic degradation via 24 - hydroxlation and a lesser affinity to the vitamin D - binding protein1), therefore the dosing interval with vitamin D2 is should not exceed fourteen days.
It is possible that the vitamin D concentrations of the milk would have been higher if the mothers had been consuming only vitamin D3, the animal form of vitamin D. Vitamin D is carried into breast milk attached to the vitamin D - binding protein; 21 since one study found vitamin D2 to have a lower affinity than vitamin D3 for the vitamin D - binding protein, it may be that vitamin D3 is much more effective than vitamin D2 at raising the levels of vitamin D in milk.
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