Sentences with phrase «always lived in small towns»

We always lived in small towns where real estate is cheaper.

Not exact matches

I always end up feeling a bit left out when people write about God as present mostly in cities — after all, I live in a small town in western Canada.
We live in a smaller Southern town and it's always been hard to stay Jewish.
But Van der Heijden, who lives in a small Dutch town, says she always felt «a dark cloud hanging over my head.»
That's one of the nice things about living in a small town, people always have time to stop and say hello.
I always say, Atlanta is the biggest small town you will ever live in!
I have always wanted a faux fur jacket, but we live in a very small town and I have always been afraid it would be too dressy.
Life in a small town is akin to journeying in the middle of the steppes: the sense that «something new and different» will spring up behind every hill, but always unerringly similar, tapering, vanishing or lingering monotonous roads.
Sometimes things are not always what they seem, especially in the small suburban town where the Carpenter family lives.
Harlan (Randy Spelling) is a musician who dreams of playing salsa music for a living; however, Latin music isn't a big thing in the small Wyoming town he's always called home, so he packs up his belongings and hits the highway for bright lights of Los Angeles, where his friend Caesar (Matt Cedeno) has promised him a spot on his couch and an audition with a band.
In American movies, small towns have always been larger than life.
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Heather Miles remembers teacher Allan Edwards, who expanded her horizons and always «gave his English students rigorous content and pushed us to see beyond the small town in which we lived.
This 30 - something single woman is an interior designer living in a small Irish town that she has always hated.
We live in a pretty remote small town, and there is not always lots to do.
To point out just a couple of things: — oceans warming slower (or cooling slower) than lands on long - time trends is absolutely normal, because water is more difficult both to warm or to cool (I mean, we require both a bigger heat flow and more time); at the contrary, I see as a non-sense theory (made by some serrist, but don't know who) that oceans are storing up heat, and that suddenly they will release such heat as a positive feedback: or the water warms than no heat can be considered ad «stored» (we have no phase change inside oceans, so no latent heat) or oceans begin to release heat but in the same time they have to cool (because they are losing heat); so, I don't feel strange that in last years land temperatures for some series (NCDC and GISS) can be heating up while oceans are slightly cooling, but I feel strange that they are heating up so much to reverse global trend from slightly negative / stable to slightly positive; but, in the end, all this is not an evidence that lands» warming is led by UHI (but, this effect, I would not exclude it from having a small part in temperature trends for some regional area, but just small); both because, as writtend, it is normal to have waters warming slower than lands, and because lands» temperatures are often measured in a not so precise way (despite they continue to give us a global uncertainity in TT values which is barely the instrumental's one)-- but, to point out, HadCRU and MSU of last years (I mean always 2002 - 2006) follow much better waters» temperatures trend; — metropolis and larger cities temperature trends actually show an increase in UHI effect, but I think the sites are few, and the covered area is very small worldwide, so the global effect is very poor (but it still can be sensible for regional effects); but I would not run out a small warming trend for airport measurements due mainly to three things: increasing jet planes traffic, enlarging airports (then more buildings and more asphalt — if you follow motor sports, or simply live in a town / city, you will know how easy they get very warmer than air during day, and how much it can slow night - time cooling) and overall having airports nearer to cities (if not becoming an area inside the city after some decade of hurban growth, e.g. Milan - Linate); — I found no point about UHI in towns and villages; you will tell me they are not large cities; but, in comparison with 20-40-60 years ago when they were «countryside», many small towns and villages have become part of larger hurban areas (at least in Europe and Asia) so examining just larger cities would not be enough in my opinion to get a full view of UHI effect (still remembering that it has a small global effect: we can say many matters are due to UHI instead of GW, maybe even that a small part of measured GW is due to UHI, and that GW measurements are not so precise to make us able to make good analisyses and predictions, but not that GW is due to UHI).
Because I live in a very small town in rural Ontario, it's always fun to spend time in a large city.
Judy Allison, a sales associate with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Montana Properties in Hamilton, Mont., says most homes in her small town are more than 100 years old, and buyers are always curious about who lived in them and whether they died there.
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