Sentences with phrase «otherwise obey»

As long as you maintain the home, pay property taxes and insurance and otherwise obey the loan's terms, you continue to own your property.
I did not add curry as my husband doesn't care for it, but otherwise obeyed the recipe.
Proper obedience training and socialization will make him more likely to respond to your commands, such as leaving a guarded space, dropping items when you say and otherwise obeying you.

Not exact matches

If we choose Christ then we obey Him otherwise there's only one other choice to make.
the word of god is unarguable, undeniable, unchangeable and everyone must obey otherwise you go to he11... until someone in the church decides they want to change it, and then it's OK.
otherwise the bible wouldn't not have commanded children to obey both parents.A female judge has authority over men.A female cop can arrest men if they break the law.
Perhaps, as you are suggesting, because we were forced to believe and obey what we were told as being the truth, or otherwise we were deemed to hell.
Otherwise, training will cause the dog to go into avoidance or even defiance, make the dog sulk, want to avoid from the handler, and not obey off leash.
Otherwise the dog will increasingly choose whether or not to obey you and become unreliable.
You will never have 100 % obedience (dogs aren't machines, otherwise competitors would always get top score in obedience trials, police dogs and guide dogs would always obey, etc... and the truth is that even top trained dogs make mistakes and sometimes don't obey).
Don't use them every single time, however; otherwise you'll find yourself with a dog that only obeys when you have a treat in hand!
If the dog won't obey a sit and stay command, or otherwise refuses to calm down, don't attach the leash.
I'll never destroy Mario, but otherwise I'm always happy to obey Wario.
You must obey by this policy unless otherwise permitted by Digital Extremes.
Otherwise I don't know what the difference is either, because science doesn't obey labeling and I am just following the observational data.
Passmore suggests that as a general rule one might have thought that a contested process in which the tribunal controlling the proceedings is empowered to make some sort of ruling that has mandatory consequences for a participant that are either penal in nature (such as a prison sentence, a fine or other form of sanction such as a suspension from practice) or otherwise require the participant to do something he or she does not wish to do (such as pay damages, obey an injunction or give an undertaking not to do something) are ones in which the privilege should be available.
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