Put a little
bit of thought into this (or a little bit of effort into google), and truth or dare for couples can make for a deep conversation, a total laugh-fest, or a heavy - breathing fantasy tickler.
Therefore, Oshkosh vehicle insurance may end up being one of the more important kinds of protection that you ever purchase, and you will want to put
a bit of thought into your decision.
Hi all — first thanks to A Siegel for posting this, I wasn't really planning to have it spread beyond Dot Earth and Daily Kos where I posted it as a diary, but I did put
a bit of thought into it, so glad to see more readers.
If you put
a bit of thought into what you're doing before you hand over your credit card for a purchase it's possible to earn significantly more miles & points than you may realise.
If you put
a bit of thought into what you're doing before you hand over your credit card...
You'll want to put
a bit of thought into the food and water bowls you choose for your dog.
They've done something neat here and actually put
a bit of thought into the box that the Adam comes in.
Most people, unsurprisingly, fell somewhere in the middle — they'd put at least a little
bit of thought into the holiday, but weren't going all - out.
My blog is primarily fashion and style, so I feel like I need to put
a bit of thought into what I am wearing to a blog conference.
If, however, you put
a bit of thought into it, you can get some gorgeous, thoughtful things.
If aliens were sending a direct message, they'd probably put
a bit of thought into how it might be read.
The truth is do, we are talking about a whole squad here, and yet I had to put a fair
bit of thought into mentioning a few comments on only four current players.
After all, managing online reputation is that not difficult if you put just
a bit of thought into it and use basic manners.
You just have to put a little
bit of thought into where you're going, what you're ordering, and what resources you can use to keep the cost down.
Not exact matches
I had a lot
of anxieties about moving
into my first apartment, and while I
think the roomies and I did a great job at making our apartment feel like a real home, there are definitely a few things we could have
thought a
bit more about before moving in together.
Smart business owners wouldn't
think of extending credit to new customers without checking
into their finances and learning a little
bit about their bill - paying histories.
I
think we are slowly heading
into an era where things are getting cleaned up it will just take a little
bit of time.
I
think the 10 % chance
of exceeding the age is the cause
of the difference, but need to dig
into that a
bit more to find a UK source to use.
Russell Lamberti: Yeah my website, ETM macro advisors website is www.etmmacro.com and I am starting a new newsletter called the macro outsider, and you can sign up for it for free on www.etmmacro.com and you'll get a free essay called «The real currency war» which is subtitled «monopoly money vs real money» and essentially there I just go
into a lot
of what we've spoken about today in terms
of chronic malinvestment, the weakness
of fiat currency reserve systems, and then ultimately where I
think the real currency war is, which is in centralized vs. decentralized money, and I talk a little
bit about cryptocurrencies there as well, so that's www.etmmacro.com you can sign up for that free newsletter.
If we were to go back to July or August
of this year and survey folks wanting to get
into the equity market, I
think many or most would probably have said they wanted a
bit of a pullback.
I spotted this call earlier in my feed from Hacker — though I am not a member (until about 10 mins ago)... I figured a top was in in BTC and the market was behaving nervously so I got out at 16,600 — thoguht straight away to look at LTC and pop it in there for a
bit, assuming that there would be a rotation out
of BTC
into there... Your trade recommendation popped up... I am sitting on my 150 % increased pile
of cash from BTC and about to make the LTC order... and I went to the gym to «
think about it».
Like de-funding Welfare, they
think this will drive people
into seeking help in the arms
of their churches where they can say «worship or starve» or hadn't you seen that
bit yet?
I would have to say, taking
into account the number
of injuries you could have worked on personally and the likelyhood
of them being Atheists and the likelyhood
of you knowing this ahead
of time that the person was an ACTUAL Atheist or God Hater (have not met one
of them) I sort
of think you are embellishing just a
bit get your some point across that has little substance to begin with.
But don't go
thinking for one hot New York minute that there aren't days that I don't morph from Mud Swallower
into Mud Slinger — and then
into a
bit of a fake - hero Mud Runner.
And I
think that was clear in the way that he would describe
biting into a summer tomato or in the way that he would sing one
of these hymns.
My friends opened the door, bleary - eyed from the late night
of talking previous, and the first thing they did was open a bottle
of sparkling apple juice, pour them
into fancy champagne glasses and toast my good book fortune, they cheered me on, and we all cried a
bit, I
think.
The bible would have taken roughly a century to get
into proper circulation, and only two and a
bit centuries later, it's quite possible that maybe it grew on some
of the Romans and out
of remorse, re-considered that they actually were responsible for killing the son
of God (in the sense they started to believe him to be), thus Constantine coming around and establishing it as a Rome's primary religion, and how closely apart the dates are, makes me
think its considerable evidence than Jesus couldn't have just been a made up figure.
As a
bit of commentary, I have long
thought that despite our protests, most Christians and churches have bought
into «the prosperity gospel» to an extent.
If you want to know / understand how God wants us to be human and so with this
thought, please listen to every
bit of Jeremy Myers and move
into relationship with Jesus Christ and your fellow citizens
of the world meant for you / us.
I'll probably try to do a «What I'm
Into» post in the next
bit of time to share some
thoughts on books — you know how I love to talk about books.
It is,
of course, easy to turn this
into a
bit of simple counsel that one should always
think ahead and be ready for emergencies.
The book is not specifically religious, so I was a
bit surprised to bump
into what I
thought was a really interesting assessment
of religious fundamentalism on page 63, where Godin writes:
Oh the insane things that pop
into my head in the middle
of the night and make me get up from my warm bed and leave my wife to scrawl in pencil on a blank sheet
of paper in the pitch blackness the silliest images that seem to perplex and plague me just so I can hopefully bring a smile to your face and maybe occasionally make us
think a little
bit world without end.
@Godpot... (God — pot... I'll have to try that... seems Dad has been holding back...) and that Moses character... I'll wager there was more than just a bush burnin» up there... (wouldn't know... me and that bird were trying to figure out the physics
of stuffing «God»
into a human womb right about that time... I'm
thinking all these characters, not just me, were a
bit «touched» as my child «Reality» likes to say...: 0)
I kind
of felt that, while I was reading her
thoughts, that she may be happier without the faith
bit, because she and her family aren't that much
into faith anyway.
Sometimes I
think the biggest challenge in talking about the church is telling ourselves the truth about it — acknowledging the scars, staring down the ugly
bits, marveling at its resiliency, and believing that this flawed and magnificent body is enough, for now, to carry us through the world and
into the arms
of Christ.
This is like allowing a bunch
of rattle snakes
into your backyard and
thinking that the snakes will not
bite.
and so it's easy to fall
into this kind
of thinking for anyone, and (2) Christian culture is so pervasive even our people get
bitten by it — we live in an odd time where you can be exposed to other church's preachers on the radio, podcasts, Christian books, etc. and so the church you go to is not going to be the only influence on how you
think and approach God & Christianity.
(We stuffed up with apartheid in South Africa, we stuffed up in Ireland, we stuffed up over black rights, we stuffed up in Iraq, we will stuff up more, at home, in the city, and a lot
of other places - We are a
bit like King Midas, we
think we are so clever and can turn things
into gold and instead, a lot
of the time it turns out as horse manure.)
I decided on the infused butter route because it would help give the cornbread a
bit of a butter crust (because it isn't incorporated
into the batter)... but
think of all the fun
thinkings you could do with a spicy simple syrup.
Confession: I used to be a
bit of a cynic,
thinking it was nothing but a day to be guilted
into supporting...
I
think I need another day to really get back
into the swing
of things post-holiday, because I spent much
of yesterday a little
bit draggy and unmotivated and worrying about many upcoming things.
You seem pretty dedicated to the texture that the yeast waffle provides, but I highly encourage you to
think about frying up some bacon and putting
bits of it
into the waffle to make a bacon waffle.
In my family I am gluten free and my brother is low FODMAP, so quite a
bit of thought has to go
into making a safe meal!
* some
bits of nougat / caramel might melt and stuck to the paper once cold — to avoid that, while the cookies are still warm, gently release them from the paper and reshape the cookies
into a circle if the melted
bits run off and change their shape; I
thought of using foil instead
of baking paper to avoid the sticking issue, but then I
thought the foil would transfer more heat to the cookies and make them too flat Makes about 38 large cookies
I actually don't like Krispy Kreme's - more than one
bite and I feel like I'm going
into insulin shock, and I also
think a lot
of fried things can be successfully baked.
Don't fool yourself
into thinking those little
bits of chopped veggies in Chinese takeout fried rice make it healthy.
I love the squish
of the filled cream puffs with the crunchy caramel, but I
think they would be fantastic if they were
bite sized — it's kind
of hard to
bite into one and have it ooze all over.
I
think they actually ended up a
bit prettier by preparing them the traditional way — so I formed a large round ball out
of the gnocchi dough, and sliced it
into about 4 pieces.
Sometimes I still get complaints, but I kind
of think I'm doing everyone a favor because who wants to
bite into a coconut - filled chocolate when you wanted caramel?