Sentences with phrase «sparrow said»

«Now, bring me that horizon,» Disney's Jack Sparrow said.
Sparrow says he now realizes how much Villanova needs him the first 39:59.
«At the moment it's a thrill and the attention is nice, but you still have to go to practice the next day,» Sparrow says.
«The problem is that, with all the diagrams and patterns and plays, I get uncomfortable within my role,» Sparrow says.
«I really believe in that thrill of victory and agony of defeat stuff, and in the last seconds I feel that ABC camera right on me,» Sparrow says.
Lobby journalists were also unimpressed, with The Guardian's Andrew Sparrow saying the jibes «came over as unprovoked, gratuitous and consequently rather cheap».
Exponentially less methane would be able to reach the atmosphere in waters that are thousands of feet deep at the very edge of the shallow seas near continents, which is the area of the ocean where the bulk of methane hydrates are,» Sparrow says.
«Petrenko and his co-authors studied a rapid warming event from the past that serves as a modern - day analog,» Sparrow says.
The situation with the Internet is in many ways not all that different than it ever was, Sparrow says.
Sparrow says: «I live 1200 ′ from a Chesapeake gas well pad.

Not exact matches

He says that an «unpleasant surprise» awaits the High Sparrow.
When asked where he got his inspiration for his performance as Captain Sparrow, Depp said that «For a good portion of the time I was spending with [Richards], I was sponging as much of him as I possibly could for the character.»
«What fell out of his independent experimenting was a more energy - efficient way to get the salt out of the water,» says Joshua Zoshi, who co-founded Saltworks Technologies with Sparrow in 2008.
«We like Elon Musk and because he gets frustrated it only makes him human,» said Gerald Sparrow of Sparrow Capital.
Meanwhile, Baltimore County officials said there is a possibility Amazon will build a new warehouse at the Tradepoint Atlantic development in Sparrows Point.
Matthew 10:29 in which Jesus says that not even a sparrow falls to the ground without God knowing it.
It is the theme of some of the best Hebrew poetry in the Psalms; it appears as one of the first generalizations of Greek philosophy in the form of the saying of Heraclitus; amid the later barbarism of Anglo - Saxon thought it reappears in the story of the sparrow flitting through the banqueting hall of the Northumbrian king; and in all stages of civilization its recollection lends its pathos to poetry.
He said His eye is even on the sparrows.
While I don't understand how it works, Jesus said that not even a sparrow falls without His notice.
We get a hint concerning what this is when we note that Jesus apparently said nothing about «the indefeasible value of the individual,» but He did say that not a sparrow «shall fall without your Father,» (Matthew, 10:2) and «take heed that ye despise not one of these little ones...» (Matthew 18:1.)
Such a fantastic religious individual would say (to characterize him by putting into his mouth these lines), «That a sparrow can live is comprehensible; it does not know anything about existing before God.
Just like the Bible says: he cares for the sparrows, aren't we more important then them?
«I guess I'll have to learn to get things right,» she said, her hands at last sparrows that had come to roost, her warmth the fragrance of fresh - baked bread.
Father, among all of the devastation that this group has wrought throughout their region, all of the deaths, so many sparrows falling to the ground, may we notice it, may we have eyes to see and ears to hear and hearts to understand, and may we grieve our brothers and sisters, may we rise up and say NO MORE with you.
When Jesus said not a sparrow falls to the ground without God knowing, was he portraying God as a counter of dead sparrows?
It is as Jesus said in Matthew 10:29 - 31: «Are not two sparrows sold for a copper coin?
Jesus says not a sparrow falls to the ground without God knowing.
Jesus said God knows when a sparrow falls, not that God will do anything about it.
What I'm trying to say is Captain Jack «sparrow» Zimmerman has pieces that his squad will build around in the coming weeks.
I like to say that they all ate like birds: 2 like sparrows and 2 like vultures.
The Guardian's Andrew Sparrow judged the speech «very good indeed» and said the highlights were «genuinely stirring».
Elsewhere, The Guardian's Andrew Sparrow calls it a «scrappy, inconclusive PMQ» and says neither man was victorious.
Mayor Luke Bronin said Friday night he was surprised to learn that his nominee for the city school board, Harold Sparrow, once led a Boston - area black clergymens» group at a time when the organization was an outspoken opponent of gay marriage.
Oh, and a footnote: asked by Andy Sparrow of the Guardian whether the Party would definitely contest Eastleigh at the next election, Warsi said only that she was responsible for «developing Conservative thinking» and that the next election will be fought on «the Coalition's record».
Noon Sky's Jon Craig reports that Labour are saying that the Tory vote has increased to about 38 % of the vote, which by my reckoning would be about 13,300 votes, equating - if Andrew Sparrow's gossip was also right - to a Tory majority of 6,500.
House sparrows, about as widespread across the United States as artificial lighting itself, make a useful test species for a first - of - its - kind study of how night illumination might contribute to disease spread, said Meredith Kernbach,...
McWilliams says that his study has defined the ultimate limits of the gut capacity of white - throated sparrows.
Today, Italian sparrows are largely cut off from their parents in the reproductive arena, Sætre says.
The sparrows threw out foreign objects of a different size more often during the egg - laying stage but they were more careful to remove unusual white objects during the incubation stage,» says Hoi.
Our goal was to fingerprint the source of methane in the Arctic Ocean to determine if ancient methane was being liberated from the seafloor and if it survives to be emitted to the atmosphere,» says Sparrow, who conducted the study, published in Science Advances, as part of her doctoral research at the University of Rochester.
House sparrows, about as widespread across the United States as artificial lighting itself, make a useful test species for a first - of - its - kind study of how night illumination might contribute to disease spread, said Meredith Kernbach, an eco-immunologist at the University of South Florida in Tampa.
But Kernbach said she found no signs in her experiment that corticosterone controlled the results she saw in house sparrows.
Sparrows kept under a dim night light typically had enough virus in their bloodstreams for at least four days to turn biting mosquitoes into disease spreaders, she said.
«We find that house sparrows living in the city are suffering from more stress than those living in the countryside, and we link this to differences in air quality and diet,» says Amparo Herrera - Dueñas, who completed this work in collaboration with the Department of Zoology and Physical Anthropology at the Complutense University of Madrid, Spain.
Both of these birds are high conservation priorities in the Northeast, and hybrid identification and monitoring can aid in management and conservation initiatives for Saltmarsh and Nelson's sparrowssaid Walsh, who conducted the study as part of her doctoral research under the mentorship of Kovach.
If she doesn't become a Sparrow, he says, she'll lose her apartment and her fragile mother's (Joely Richardson) medical care.
This isn't, say, Paul Verhoeven's Red Sparrow, which I expect would generate a lot more controversy.
Eventually, Sparrow's old nemesis Captain Barbossa (Geoffrey Rush) shows up and says he'll help Salazar track down Captain Jack.
Needless to say, the plot doesn't go off as expected, and Dominika finds herself signed up for «Sparrow School» in an isolated boarding house that trains attractive young people in seduction and manipulation, so that those skills can be used to further Russian interests in the wider world.
A gash of violence finally decides the lady's fate, but we're so numbed by that point by speeches that repeat the same points with different animal metaphors that the resolution carries little impact — as these two might say, like a sparrow thudding against a window.
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