Sentences with phrase «bit like reading»

As someone commented recently, it's a bit like reading Soviet era PRAVDA.
Franta: It is always a little bit like reading the tea leaves: How is it going versus how it could be going, what effect it will have.
It's a bit like reading James Lovelock, a critical mind can see many flaws but a dull, normal mind just accepts what is said in faith.
Reading this article and the comments feels a bit like reading my facebook page.
I guess the last thing I discovered is that it's hard to resist the couple's charm — and their endearing message that true love... is a little bit like reading your Kindle.
It's vaguely dissatisfying, a bit like reading a book and having the last few pages missing.
It feels a little bit like reading a horoscope in that you can find things that apply to you in most of the descriptions.

Not exact matches

He was in the kind of dorm a nonviolent offender like Shkreli is likely to wind up in, and his post might be a bit reassuring to Shkreli if he had time to read it before he was taken into custody:
«I read over every bit of info, just like I did for J.P. Morgan and Citigroup, but I kept thinking, «Wait a second, this is ridiculous.
As titillating as it might be to read Andreessen's text messages to Zuckerberg, however — in which the former quotes from a 1950's film noir with Burt Lancaster, remarking «The cat's in the bag and the bag's in the river» — the whole thing feels like a bit of a sideshow.
But yes, I'd like to be reading about you finally paying off that last bit of mortgage debt while I'm sitting on the beach sipping lemonade later this year.
Ezra Klein: So I'm going to give a little bit of a quick Singapore overview for folks who aren't as read in on it, and if anybody would like to learn a lot more about this, they can search my name and Singaporean healthcare system.
I keep meaning to move into index funds but I want to read up a bit on a few things first because I, like you, don't want 100 % in, say, an S&P index fund and nothing else.
I read a cdn arts book written by a socialist kind of like Frasier Crane who actually turned me off arts funding a bit.
For those who haven't had the time to read the legaled - up language of every single privacy policy we encounter (which, considering Carnegie Mellon researchers estimated it would take the average user the equivalent of 76 work days per year to do, is most of us), and even for people like me who do it for a living and still find disclosure gaps, the Facebook — Cambridge Analytica scandal managed to shed a bit of light on the otherwise obscure relationships between some tech companies and advertisers.
I have to say from what I have read about it, it is a bit like a Star Trek episode where they time travel and because of the implications nothing quite makes sense in the end.
Usually, I like what Rainer writes, so I was a bit surprised to read this book.
This almost totally mystified me; to read of churches like this at all; so little I had seen or heard or read of this (one or two exceptions were on my sphere of concern; few others something like this, I'd heard or read a bit of; are there really so many now?
Read it especially if you wonder how feminism can be reconciled with the Bible, or if you suspect that those of us who call ourselves Christian Feminists are just picking and choosing the bits of Scripture that we like best.
bootyfunk your and idiot because that passage in mathew 10 its a parrable he is trying to get people to realize that God needs to be the most important thing your life because with him you would not be period so to say that Jesus Christ the son of God is promoting volience is ridiculous, it tares me up that people like you take bit's and peices of the bible and make sound like you want it to if your going to read the Christian hand book then read it all do nt take stuff out of contence just to suit your life style your truly and always be a devoute Christian
Read a little bit about science, or go back to school, before you make unqualified comments like this.
Haven't read your story yet.would like to share ours with u and your wife sumtime.read a bit here on your blog and already I'm like, that's so my husband and I at the moment!in my opinion you are one of the few people who I can actually relate to as a follower of christ.hopefully more people will become real about where they are at, going beyond the bullshit that is fed to us that has nothing to do with following Jesus.thanx for listening.
This is to davidnfran hay David you might have brought this up in a previous post I haven't read, but i did read quit a bit about your previous comments and replies at the beginning of this blog, so I was just wondering in light of what hebrews 6 and 10 say how would you enterprite passages like romans 8 verses 28 thrue 39 what point could paul have been trying to make in saying thoughs amazing things in romans chapter 8 verses 28 thrue 39 in light of hebrews 6 and 10, Pauls says that god foreknew and also predestined thoughs whom he called to be conformed to the image of his son so that he would be the first born among many brothers and then he goes on saying that neither death nor life nor angels nor rulers nor things present nor things to come nor powers nor hight nor death can ever separate us from the love of god in christ jesus so how would i inturprate that in light of that warning in hebrews 6 and 10,
I'd like to enjoy reading this book... so much time on my hands at the moment and having something with some bite to it is very welcome.
We read the Bible «through the Jesus lens» — which looks suspiciously like it means using the parts of the Gospels that we like, with the awkward bits carefully screened out, which enables us to disagree with the biblical texts on God, history, ethics and so on, even when Jesus didn't (Luke 17:27 - 32 is an interesting example).
Most of us know what it's like to read a section of scripture and find ourselves thinking, I wish that bit wasn't there.
Watching this premiere with the full knowledge of the series in mind, you can read it all as set - up for the character transformation to come, but tonally, the episode feels a bit like a bait - and - switch.
Perhaps you might use bits of the rewrite, teasers that make us want to read the entire rewrite, kind of like a movie trailer that makes us want to see the movie.
So I finally read it, and yes, I liked it, but like I said, my expectations were probably too high and so I did feel a bit let down.
Reading Chesterton is a bit like watching Star Wars.
So sorry about that last post this is Debbie I read something on your site that you wasn't pastoring anymore and I was wondering why cuz I was reading some of your material about the armor of God and I liked it so it had me bothered a little bit that you was not pastoring anymore
In reading about that period in Goldstein's book, however, I began to feel a bit like a GI grunt who had landed on Normandy or frozen his toes in the Battle of the Bulge but only later learned what was really going on.
(When I read that intro to Mr. B, he told me that it sounded like I may have a bit of an attitude, which wasn't my intention at all.
Like pouring tea into your teacup, or savouring your first bite of dinner, or reading without your phone buzzing.
I was thinking these were like the peanut butter protein bites and I totally didn't read the directions.
If you read through the comments it seems like everyone makes it a bit differently!
And because the turkey, stuffing, pies, etc. tend to be a bit of a bugger I like to load up my menu with things that can be made in advance, covered and set in my walk - in fridge (read: front porch) until dinner time.
A bit like this recipe which has been on the blog for a while already but that now has got a little make over in the shape of a video and some new images, you can still read my initial post below the video but here's a little cheers to the new year.
Before I get into this spicy, cool beverage I would like to talk a little bit about... Read More
Hes a bit like myself, am not Continue Reading
I really want to try using my own homemade puree with your recipe, but I just read a post about making pumpkin puree from scratch, its seems like a bit of work... now I think I'll just stick with the good ole» canned stuff.
Just like the Blood Orange Muffins I've made before, the first bite is a little confusing to the palate, but the second one rolls... [Continue reading]
I made it about a week before Christmas so I'd have something healthy to eat for breakfast, and I liked the idea that it had a bit... [Continue reading]
Reading statements such as: ``... I have been consumed by what I like to call intense «investigative» home - cooking and entertaining — fueled by the advent of the food networks — ultimately leading to part - time free - lance food writing and a bit of teaching.
Interestingly enough no one is married in my group of close friends, and we're all in our late 20's and early 30's, so reading your words was like seeing that bit of life from someone else's eyes.
Also, reading through the recipe once or twice first seems to always ease the process with recipes like this that are a bit more involved.
Sometimes if I happen to wake up really early for some reason, like 5:00 am, I like to read in bed for a bit, or watch a scary movie early in the morning.
I would suggest that you read the whole recipe though as there are bits where she adds water to a dressing or sauces which are only written into the write up of the recipe and not the list of ingredients, so if like me you speed read the recipe you may miss it meaning that it can be too thick.
It sounds like the book will be fairly insightful (for both American and Russian readers) and minus the random bits of misogyny that will inevitably be thrown in, I really want to read it!
From what Iv read it sounds like they've put a fair bit of effort to it.
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