Sentences with phrase «adage puts»

As the old adage puts it, practice makes perfect.
In search of a theory to back up these assertions, testing opponents often invoke «Campbell's Law,» an adage put forth in the 1970s by social scientist Donald Campbell.
Matt Creamer of AdAge put together a good article on general issues on the web.

Not exact matches

We're all familiar with the old adage about the dangers of putting all your eggs in one basket, and this is a textbook example.
Remember the age - old adage, don't put all your eggs in one basket.
Sounds like the adage Don't put your eggs in one basket.
Hence, the old airline adageput on your own oxygen mask first, before helping others.
The manager also knows that it can be very hard to put on a fgood performance if you do not start well, the old adage of not being able to turn it on like a tap.
Still, as the old adage goes «You can only beat what is put in front of you» and Bolton have applied that rule perfectly thus far in the FA Cup, dispatching both Lincoln & United with aplomb.
I have heard so - called adages of He'll never learn to walk if you don't put him down and Babies have to have tummy time.
But as the adage goes, we have to put on our oxygen masks first.
«We're being reared on the notion of our own individuality and the belief that we need tools and filters to find other like - minded individuals, rather than put our faith in supposedly hokey old adages like «opposites attract»,» says Mintel's Richard Cope.
As the old adage does, it is unwise to put all your eggs in one basket.
Some online learners may abide by the old adage: «why put off to tomorrow what you can do today.»
But I'm a firm believer in the adage of not putting all your eggs in a basket and, since VfA is not related to anything I already had with NRP, I figured this was the book to strike out on my own with.
There's an old adage about not putting all of your eggs in one basket.
But, the old adage «Don't put all your eggs in one basket» applies to just about everything in my humble opinion.
Diversification is a strategy that can be neatly summed up by the timeless adage «Don't put all your eggs in one basket.»
You've heard the age - old adage, «Don't put all your eggs in one basket.»
Well, a few years back we decided to put that adage to the test.
Once the geopolitical conundrums are put in place, players onto the battlefield to disprove the old adage about pen and sword.
Perhaps now they realise that the old adage of «the more locks you put on the door, the more likely it is to be propped open» applies here as much as everywhere else.
There is an old adage that goes: «a good arrangement between parties is one where the contract can be put away at the end of the negotiation and never looked at again.»
Specialization can make lawyers more valuable, but at the same time, the old adage applies: Don't put all your eggs in one basket.
Capital One lives up to the adage of putting their money where their mouth is.
Simply put, an alienating parent operates by the adage, «My way or the highway.»
Have you ever heard the adage, «Don't put all of your eggs in one basket?»
And if the recent economic situation of the last couple of years has taught us anything, it's reinforced that old adage: You shouldn't put all of your eggs in one basket.
It's one of those «learn from experience» adages that I have never agreed with, especially when it puts a child at risk of serious injury.
Consider the «Rule of Seven,» an old marketing adage that says you need to put your message out to your audience seven times before they will consider buying from you.
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