Sentences with phrase «yet at a quick glance»

Not exact matches

Yet a quick glance at the parenting section in any Christian bookstore shows we apparently only do so from ages 5 and up, leaving out the critical first years of learning and education.
He finds room across his sprawling yet intimate canvas for winks to prior masters and their work, too, as in a quick glance at a neon sign above a storefront near the movie palace named «Laughton,» which indicates a key visual influence, Charles Laughton's only feature as director, the memorably wicked and watery «Night of the Hunter» (1955).
A quick glance at this year's Oscar nominees and the odds for the winners reminds us yet again how hard it is for a funny man (or woman) to bring home the gold.
The service isn't quite there yet with its original movie offerings, but a quick glance at their upcoming calendar suggests that could very well change in the near future.
So the all - new fifth - generation Nissan Micra, which just debuted at the 2016 Paris motor show, is worth at least a quick glance from our side of the Atlantic; assuming they keep selling them up north — it's not yet confirmed for any market except Europe at the moment — there's a decent chance you'll come across one in a border town sometime down the road.
While these numbers do not include December yet (which should vastly inflate them, as Christmas is prime time for the games industry), a quick glance at the numbers shows the industry as being in quite a slump.
It may not be enough to bring people back to a game most had written off even before launch (a quick glance at the Metacritic score tells you people aren't ready to forgive yet), but EA's efforts to claw back some goodwill from players should at least give the game a longer tail than perhaps it would've if we'd coughed up for loot crates in November of last year.
89 Edwards, supra note 3, at 160 (suggesting that subject line should «state the email's subject and purpose in terms that will be specific enough to communicate well but not too detailed to be read at a quick glance»); Chew & Pryal, supra note 23, at 136 (urging use of «short yet informative» subject lines and suggesting that «eight words is approximately the maximum number of words that most smartphone email clients can show on their screens»); Shapo, supra note 4, at 343 (recommending «treating your subject line as a brief summary of the message»).
Yet, all it takes is a quick glance at your Profile, changing it section by section, until you're happy with the final result.
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