Sentences with phrase «sometimes at least the end»

Not exact matches

Some relationships end there, but sometimes bandaids actually work — at least for a time.
This repetition has usually been at least to a thrilling end, sometimes to appealingly abstract effect, and occasionally even reached into the sublime.
And sometimes I get to the end of the poem and haven't solved anything, but at least I have a new poem out of it.»
In the end, I decided that I really didn't need to be rude and crude to someone I don't know except 2nd or 3rd hand and who is at least sometimes sensible
Account providers sometimes require both parties to agree, but at least they should issue a notification to the student when the settlor withdraws funds, because the student will face additional taxable income at year end.
Well, it seems reasonable to have one main program (or two, maybe even three, if you are a very frequent flyer), but you should have secondary programs: at least one per airline alliance (you may unexpectedly end up on another alliance if you need to be rerouted), and sometimes even within the same alliance.
Psychologist Barry Schwartz calls this the «paradox of choice,» and it feels at least intuitively true: Sometimes, when you're given total freedom of choice and a huge number of options, you'll end up feeling like you can't evaluate the quality of all of those options.
«Narrative is a difficult art; narrative should flow as flows the brook down through the hills and the leafy woodlands, its course changed by every bowlder it comes across and by every grass - clad gravelly spur that projects into its path; its surface broken, but its course not stayed by rocks and gravel on the bottom in the shoal places; a brook that never goes straight for a minute, but goes, and goes briskly, sometimes ungrammatically, and sometimes fetching a horseshoe three - quarters of a mile around, and at the end of the circuit flowing within a yard of the path it traversed an hour before; but always going, and always following at least one law, always loyal to that law, the law of narrative, which has no law.
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