Sentences with phrase «by pretty things»

I don't want to be a hoarder, of course, and less is often more, but I do like to be surrounded by pretty things.
I've always been motivated by pretty things (and, apparently, exciting undergarments).
Life in Toronto through my eyes accompanied by the prettiest things I find covering hair and makeup.
Life in Toronto through my eyes accompanied by the prettiest things I find covering hair and makeup.

Not exact matches

By the looks of things, many of you have been so busy building wealth through your businesses in the past few years, you've forgotten something pretty important — namely, a succession plan.
The U.S. State Department hasn't helped things by issuing a vaguely - worded travel alert covering pretty much the entire planet.
There's «more work to do, but by the time we get to the end of the year, things look pretty strong and pretty solid.»
While you were probably right from a moral perspective (judging people by their appearance remains a crappy thing to do), apparently from a scientific one, you were pretty much dead wrong.
And I said, but I think it's time for the Japanese people to be aware of people because it's a pretty heady thing to be asked to go defend an island and, by the way, don't plan on coming back.
Sometimes we get conned by this Apple pretty - things - you - want - to - lick kind of innovation.
And then by the time I get around to clearing things that are in my promotional inbox on Google inbox, there's so much crap in there that the odds of me actually reading your newsletter are pretty slim, unless you have a great, awesome newsletter.
And yes, she has been telegraphing her... let's call it a «paradigm shift», for longer than just Sunday, but all the parents who let their girls enjoy Hannah Montana aren't always monitoring the celebrity music scene to see the new videos, so they may not know... but this whole thing was pretty unavoidable by anyone who has facebook or twitter.
There are lots of examples of teachers doing some pretty horrific things to kids who refuse to say the pledge of allegiance — many caught on camera by students.
Including, or maybe especially, things you already pretty much know by heart in English, like your favorite children's books.
The Givenness of Things: Essays by Marilynne Robinson:: This is the first non-fiction book of Marilynne Robinson's that I've read and it's beautiful, eloquent, smart, and I pretty much underlined the entire book.
So pretty much all I had to sort things out were the Scriptures, a few friends to talk with (many were traumatized by the split and would get freaked out, so we didn't talk much), and trying to follow the leading of the Spirit to learn and discern.
In some contemporary writings inspired by Lewis, the reader may get the impression that the fact of Bethlehem and the myth of Narnia, the fact of Christ and the myth of Aslan, are, at the end of the day, pretty much the same thing.
Sadly, these initiatives are fought tooth and nail by anti-gay groups (sadly pretty much all of which identify as Christian) who want to claim (against all evidence) that being gay makes you more likely to commit suicide not anything that you suffer as a result of being gay, just some arbitrary offense against God thing.
He was definitely a nonconformist in a lot of ways (the things he said and taught were pretty radical), though he was also the biggest conformist in all of history if you think about him being the only person to perfectly abide by the law and conform to the pattern of humanity as God originally intended.
The idea of community is heightened by that, and individuality is dropped, which I think is a pretty good thing.
You're just saying that Christians glorify satan by doing wrong things (sinning) which is frankly pretty obvious, but it's not like we're doing something to glorify God and in the process glorying Satan as well we're just plain doing the wrong thing.
(By the way, one thing that atheists - and I'm not saying you are one - do is they will believe that we can know what happened a billion years ago out in space, but we can't know pretty well what happened 2,000 years ago).
He understands that the thing of letting the self go is a pretty serious business after all, he is not so apoplectically muddled by the blow as the immediate man is, he understands by the aid of reflection that there is much he may lose without losing the self; he makes admissions, is capable of doing so — and why?
I'm pretty sure people prayed for the children of Holocaust, if they knew what was going on, but God is never of the world, and we can not think that God does things by which we think is justice.
I was born in 1965, and by 1975 things were looking pretty good.
Mormonism was invented by a man who pretended that god told him it was okay to have another wife any time a pretty young thing caught his eye.
As you know, the sphere of things that can't be critiqued (dogma) are pretty small — and even then you could critique the dogma by saying it needs further explanation.
If what you interpret Paul as saying is that before creating all the myriad galaxies and star systems God decided that They would put some humans on the third planet from an insignificant star on a little arm of a middling galaxy and that the first hominids chosen role would be to perform pretty much to spec and do something silly and rebellious (arguably without sufficient information as to consequences for themselves and their off spring, oh, and for serpents) and cause affront to the tripartite godhead warranting separation of Gods grace from all their offspring; then we are left with people being chosen from way back before the Big Bang to do some terrible things like killing babies or betraying Jesus who was chosen on the same non date (time didn't exist before creation) to die in a fairly nasty fashion and thereby appease the righteous wrath of himself and his fellow Trinitarians by paying a penalty as a substitute for all future sins (of believers?)
There are pretty cool things about all the prophecies Jesus fulfilled, historical info pointing to Christ and the disciples, as well as psychological analyses of the changes seen in people in the bible that could only be logically explained by major shifts in belief.
they all say same thing pretty much... got to remember we can not fully trust 100 percent all translations... which is why one needs to study properly by using Koine Greek (for NT) dictionaries and concordances... and Hebrew dictionaries for OT... when one realizes how the versions are trnalated they will see this... also... thuis is true of ANY piece of literature... have you ever studied and spoken another r language?
I grew up with a rather rough home life, beaten pretty routinely by my alcoholic father, and even though I thought * my * life was pretty normal, after all you do get used to some things after awhile, I also had an undercurrent thought that somehow managed to whisper to me that I wasn't like everyone else out there.
The thing is, it's pretty much impossible not to be influenced by one's culture.
Moralism and moral values are by no means the same thing, but with the slurring of language the two have come pretty close.
Griffin's reply is that this is irrelevant even if true.3 The reason it is irrelevant is that even if the process deity got things pretty much the way he intended, there is a «big gap» between such a world and the world that would have been created by the God of traditional theism, whose ability to create is limited only by what is logically possible.
@NeverBeenBrainwashed, Judging by the nature of your comments all over this message board, it's pretty clear that you are so focused on the things of this world that you are not willing or able to understand the things of God.
I think God is pretty unique, he knows material things can not be proved by Faith, as Faith is whats needed to access the Spirit of God.
I associated Ice Cube with a horrifyingly ridiculous speech I heard in a classroom by some handsome full - of - himself black 12th - grader, about how Ice Cube was his hero because he had inspired him to avoid crack and gangs, as if it were some heroic thing for this guy who apparently had pretty middle - class parents to avoid falling into those, and as if Ice Cube had not in fact glamorized the gang life, overt misogyny, etc..
So or so, yes, not - only - external healing by faith itself of physical things (e.g., bullet in the head, tumor, spear in stomach, viri) seems, respectivly technically is, impossible, but i am pretty sure that about any patient appreciates when a surgeon is focusing at the tasks at hand particularly during operation regardless of statistics.
Get it out of the way, so by the time you hit your stride at 32, 34, you know, hey, I'm not good at all that other stuff but I've found a couple of things that I'm pretty good at.
As much «editing» that might have gone on by or for King James the two still say pretty much the same thing just in an older language... guess he didn't edit it that much
My accounts are pretty popular and I'm sure there are people that have thought that by looking at them, but I promise behind the happy photos there are lots of insecurities and hang ups, there are big personal issues, struggles with health things, stresses over running a business and becoming a public figure that people can openly pull apart.
Pretty soon the puppy will see a dog walk by on the street which will result in this low barking growl thing she does.
Perhaps I should start by saying that I have had insomnia and some other health problems for 25 + years that make me feel draggy, foggy and generally crappy pretty much all the time, so I really notice when things help how I feel, and help give me some energy and focus.
My brain doesn't fog, and I have plenty of energy by doing things this way, and it seems my body is happy and adjusts in and out of keto pretty easily as well.
It's pretty simple as batters go and you can make it by hand which is always a good thing.
but I get distracted by the next pretty thing and out of my head it goes.
If you like to show your affection and esteem by baking, this recipe for Shortbread heart cookies with homemade salted caramel and a chocolate drizzel is pretty much the best thing ever.
Man - thing doesn't drink coffee, for the record, so this was an uber win for team awesome, because I'm going to take this as permission to add coffee to pretty much anything from now on.I'm pretty much wired by now to expect coffee straight after a meal, so adding coffee to the meal itself is really game - changing stuff for me.
Spinach is among other things smack packed with carotenoids but their usual red / orange / yellow colours are in this case hidden by the amounts of chlorophyll in the pretty leaves (and chlorophyll we LIKE).
I live on my own and have to get by on a pretty tight budget, but I still like to get creative in the kitchen and eat healthy (mostly vegetarian), and most importantly: not the same thing over and over again.
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