Sentences with phrase «as shirkers»

Not exact matches

How can we respect a manager who tells such ridiculous lies for reasons of keeping — as he thinks — lazy, bone idle players happy and content to remain here on their huge salaries for many years, irrespective of whether or not these shirkers actually EARN their money.
he is a winner and that in a team full of shirkers and mentally fragile people that is a big factor... he is also calm under pressure, has been there and done it all so will easily command respect... add that to the fact that as a keeper he can see the whole pitch from his vantage point and correct any anomalies... not all captains are shouters or the aggresive type, Zidane was a captain that leads by example and he does not shout or act aggressively to get his point across
Hope our players and manager knows the severity of the challenges ahead, Man city will not slip up as much as they have done so far, so our players better start owning games and stop been shirkers and chokers when the pressure is on... Man u will probably go for Mourhino now, make of that what you want!!!
The problems in rich societies such as most of those in Europe is not, heretical as this is to say, caused by these societies somehow not being wealthy enough (and therefore requiring more GDP growth, and the associated promotion and veneration of «wealth creators» and establishing ideological divisions within society between «shirkers and strivers» etc.).
Although, as I've said before, he and his colleagues shouldn't allow that confidence to spill over into callous rhetoric — there's more to Iain Duncan Smith's reforms than lazy lines about «scroungers» and «shirkers» admit.
• Vince Cable, the business secretary, has criticised George Osborne for stigmatising people on out - of - work benefits as «shirkers».
The film changes a few bits from the book, including making Jo - Jo the shirker into the Mayor's son, giving the film a deeper emotional center, serving as an additional relationship to go with the bond between Horton and the mayor, but most of the rest of the story is still in place, held together by Charles Osgood's narration, which has just the right effect.
As the first weekend of Sundance comes to an end, FC Editor - in - Chief Nicolas Rapold and Eric Hynes, FC contributor and Curator of Film at Museum of the Moving Image, discuss the white privilege and bacchanalia of Sebastián Silva's disorienting Tyrel, Ethan Hawke's biopic of heavy - drinking country singer / songwriter Blaze Foley, Gustav Möller's gimmicky debut thriller The Guilty, and the joyousness and charm of Sandi Tan's first - person Singapore - set documentary Shirkers.
In a 1987 essay, «Norms as Social Capital,» Coleman noted that people act in accordance with norms to avoid social sanctions - a disapproving look, a raised eyebrow, the whispered label of «shirker» - as well as to earn approval.
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