Sentences with phrase «bring in a bit»

It's a team which is massively short on quality so it will be all down to work rate and hoping some of their players don't show up... Iwobi out is good Ramsey in brings in a bit more energy but no ability to dominate middle of park which is where we we will struggle... Chambers xhaka bellerin and mustafi will need to play out of their skins which has hardly been the case all season and kos will need to show leadership skills but if wilshere ozil and aubemayang click there could at least be a forward threat... An honest assessment 3 1» to them
It felt too poufy as a long - sleeved top, so I decided to have the sleeves cut into a simple short - sleeve blouse and the sides brought in a bit.
And since I'm not a hat girl I brought in a bit of the manliness of the fedora with my white blazer.
A small pine fit perfectly in my large trophy and I found these cute pom - poms while shopping at HomeGoods and couldn't resist added them to the top of the hutch to bring in a bit of red and white.
A coral boho - chic floral print on a soft cotton blend ground makes it easy to bring in a bit of color without overpowering existing décor.
We're also a block from the beach, so bringing in a bit of the beachy / coastal vibe was only natural.
Mike is the guy who does all the arranging as he is the one who has to sing these songs so us other guys bring in bits and pieces which works really well for us.
He's such a fun character that I wish the writers would have brought him in a bit sooner.
Spielberg's still got ta Spielberg, so there are plenty of moments that bring in a bit too much treacle or cliche to make The Post a purely satisfying picture.
And as they start bringing in a bit of money of their own, you'll also want to discuss how they can start participating in saving for some bigger things in their life.
In 2005 my line of ketubah prints was bringing in a decent income, and I designed a line of invitations and stationery to match, which brought in a bit more (and also started a trend in the highly competitive ketubah «industry»).
(Please don't bring in the bit that all skeptics are wholly unqualified dentists, etc..
Alternatively, if you're working with an urban setting, bring in a bit of color with potted plants and vibrant seat cushions or pillows.
I hadn't thought about the ceiling and bringing in a bit of color that way.
I'm getting ready to paint my kitchen island to bring in a bit more color and personality, so you know what I would vote for!!
I'd like to the bring in a bit of gold, too.
That room does not have a window so it really needs to be something that will bring in a bit of homemade sunshine!
The playful pattern rug, even before I saw the other color combos, made me think of your green and pink bathroom for some reason — in a much smaller version but a way to bring in a bit of the vintage tile look now without having to make expensive changes.

Not exact matches

We do a little bit of everything from a gingerbread house contest to Hanukkah cookies to decorating the office tree and bringing in presents for the local Toys for Tots drive.
Indeed, the evidence I reviewed does not support the view — expounded by the new Bank of Japan management — that by buying more longer - dated securities (i.e., running printing presses a bit faster) will boost upward pressures in labor and product markets to bring stronger economic growth and an inflation rate of 2 percent.
He's credited with bringing a bit of swagger to a traditionally dry regulatory regime, but he doesn't need to shout: Some of the biggest companies in the country parse his every statement for clues to their fate.
The Googlers at Facebook were a bit like the Greeks during the rise of the Roman Empire: They brought lots of civilization and tech culture with them, but it was clear who was going to run the world in the near future.
She created a bit of a frenzy, bringing in $ 40,000 almost overnight.
While the financial services industry has quite a bit of work to do in bringing more transparency to the titles used to describe different financial professionals, it is the responsibility of investors to ask the right questions to determine whether the financial professional they work with meets their requirements.
Or you rely on your accounting firm to pick up bits and pieces of your business until you bring in a controller.
The numbers were a bit low for the Sharks, but Cuban wasn't worried, because one of his best investments from the show has been Tower Paddle Boards, which is highly profitable and bringing in around $ 10 million in annual revenue.
«Lying in a makeshift hospital bed in conditions that would make most of us queesy, and thinking it's the bite of a mosquito that brings me to my knees, I thought that I could do something to help prevent this disease and other diseases,» Tifft said.
Thus, when Canada brought McWraps over from Europe last spring, there were changes — the sweet chili sauce was made spicier, and tortilla chips were added to the Fiesta wrap because Canadians apparently appreciate multiple textures in a single bite.
If Blackburn had succeeded in bringing a few victims North for mosquitoes to bite, he may have succeeded in his dark quest.
«I've been told by my managers, and praised for it, that this is a super valuable bit that I bring to the team that often results in our launching products on time.»
Though Jimmy Kimmel kept a steady hand with the hosting duties for a second year, his bits — including bringing stars like Gal Gadot, Emily Blunt, Mark Hamill, and Armie Hammer to surprise a theater filled with people watching Disney's «A Wrinkle in Time» — weren't that memorable.
In the past, that tension might have triggered a tug of war between the board and the founder over appointing a new CEO, but recently more founders are champing at the bit to bring on a COO.
The judge hearing the case, Justice Sean Dunphy, sounds a bit puzzled as to why the case was brought before him at all, instead of hammered out in council chambers, according to reporters in the courtroom:
This is a brilliant way of promoting products, enabling discovery as well as bringing a little bit of extra joy in each delivery!
«Everyone expected the worst, and the contagion fears were brought back to fruition, but as the day has gone on those fears have abated a bit,» Bill Schultz, who oversees $ 1.2 billion as chief investment officer at McQueen, Ball & Associates in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, said in a phone interview.
Action: Write to your political reps to demand stronger privacy laws Who is this for: Anyone who cares about privacy, and especially Internet users in North America right now How difficult is it: A bit of effort Tell me more: There appears to be bipartisan appetite among U.S. lawmakers to bring in some form of regulation for Internet companies.
Hold an entire breakfast in two hands and bring it right up to your face for a bite.
«The purpose of my participation in the congress was to bring a bit of business experience from Europe to Brazil.
«God so loved the world he impaled himself upon it, and God's there in sorrow and in dark times bringing a bit of light.»
Let me get this straight... in a nutshell — you ask me to believe a man suffered a horrible death on a cross to save me from my sins, sin brought into the world when some lady talked a guy into biting into an apple?
We touched on this a little bit Friday, when several of you encouraged me to focus less attention on deconstructing fundamentalism and more attention on moving forward in the reconstruction process — good suggestions for bringing more life and focus to the blog.
If the Israelis suffer casualties and then stage an air raid, bring in the old eye - for - an - eye bit.
Even for one who has been brought up «in the faith» a bit of reflection makes one admit that the shades of difference between propitiation and expiation or between redemption and ransom are rather vague in one's mind.
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,
Even when he starts calling himself Jesus and mellows out a bit in the sequel, he still peppers his loving - speak with sentiments like (and I'm paraphrasing) «bring he who does not believe to me and slay him before me.»
We already saw this a little bit in the fact that God brought Christ both through Solomon and Nathan, so that Christ could be the King both legally and spiritually, so that God's plans would not be thwarted by Satan or the evil king Jeconiah.
I think taking time away from them shutting down the phone at times has brought a little bit more Jesus focus, and in some cases a little more sanity, and a little bit more emotional stability.
In fairness to those who brought the suit, however, this is a case of the worm turning, of the dog biting after repeated provocation.
But since those days of reading Ratzinger's Introduction to Christianity with Derek, and being invited by him to the openings of new speakeasies, I've discovered that «A priest walks into a bar» can also be a perfectly appropriate beginning to giving thanks at the end of a day (a good or bad one), to finding friendship in a foreign city, and even to bringing a bit of charity and Christian fellowship to places where communities have long gathered.
MacLeish's contribution, other than bringing the story into the 20th century, making a great contribution to the tiny, tiny pool of American poetic drama, and winning the 1959 Pulitzer with it, is quite a bit of additional commentary by his God and Satan characters, a pair of washed - up actors who observe the Job story being played on a stage, and occasionally take part in it.
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