Sentences with phrase «blocked by other things»

But gutters and downspouts can be blocked by other things, too, including pine needles, twigs, «helicopter» maple seeds and even tennis balls.

Not exact matches

That's a lot and the other thing that's really worth noting is that of all the cherries that come into the pack house in Orchard View, over 80 % of them are directly owned by at least, or blocks that are managed by the staff at Orchard View.
Get «Happiest Baby on the Block» video to learn some heavy duty techniques; watch it with your partner, and look for other techniques like gently bicycling his legs, and distracting him by showing him new things around the house and yard.
And I did: we use the same diapers and baby food and bottles, bought the bassinet and travel crib they have, swear by the Happiest Baby on the Block (which Brooke introduced us to), plus a zillion other things too numerous to even remember.
It details how Cuomo sought to block a subpoena that the commission intended to send to REBNY in order to investigate, among other things, the organization's political donations, its materials related to the controversial 421 - a abatement used by New York developers including Extell Development and Silverstein Properties, and its communications with public officials.
Perhaps just to make sure other people aren't blocked by random things.
Since its beginnings, Shannon Ebner's practice has investigated language's structures, but where it once sought to make them objective by building words out of cinder blocks (among other things), it has now entered a more poetic, associative phase.
These include activities (doing things you enjoy that help you take your mind off whatever is causing you stress), contributing (doing volunteer work or helping out a friend), comparisons (comparing what you do to cope with stressful situations to what other people do or how you cope today to how you coped in years» past), emotions (immerse yourself in books, poetry, music, films, or television shows that trigger strong emotions), pushing away (cutting yourself off from the situation at hand by mentally blocking it out), thoughts (finding mentally - stimulating activities to do, such as crossword puzzles, playing video games, writing poetry, or solving mathematical equations), and sensations (finding means to elicit strong physical reactions, such as holding an ice cube for a minute or taking a long, cold shower; this is similar to self - harm but without the harmful effects).
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