They say you can't have a bad meal in Rome, and
we almost proved the theory, but near the end we chose a place that was no doubt awesome when the person who recommended it to us spent many evenings there, but for us, was an series of flabby pastas with ketchup - like sauces and mealy antipasti.
Not exact matches
That's not the first time I've made such a discovery: It seems that for
almost every study indicating the truth of one
theory, there's another
proving the opposite.
This isn't just a
theory; it has been
proved and demonstrated repeatedly by
almost every person who practices it.
Christians, Judaism, Islam, and Athiests are beliefs systems aka ideologies / hope therefore, it is
almost like a
theory, none of these groups can
prove the truth because there are always questions like «Is there a God or not?»
But with power and endurance
almost at their saturation point — it's hard for a young hotshot to blow a veteran off the court when he barely holds a physical advantage (19 - year old Bernard Tomic and 21 - year old Milos Raonic are attempting to
prove this
theory wrong)-- the best players in the game these days are also rather experienced.
you're missing the point — radiative heat transfer is the smallest part of the climate system — it just works better for their pet
theory — called the greenhouse effect — that was
proven wrong
almost a century ago!
What I found in late 2009
almost always led me to myriad praise of Gelbspan as the discoverer of leaked industry memos containing the awkward «strategy» phrase «reposition global warming as
theory rather than fact,» which
proved skeptic climate scientists were on the payroll of «Big Coal & Oil.»
If CAGW
theory was
proven true as based on this paper then why aren't the ocean's boiling right now at
almost 400ppm CO2?
In
theory, there might be other isolated circumstances where self - defense against a police officer is legal, but they involve fact patterns so quirky that they would
almost never happen in real life, or would
almost never be possible to
prove in a manner that the courts would believe.