Sentences with phrase «catching up on reading over»

It's time again to catch up on your reading over the weekend.

Not exact matches

Finally catching up on my blog reading and FINALLY drooling over this recipe.
But it was his second season at Arsenal when he really caught the eye, and he was duly called up to sit on the bench for the first - team's League Cup wins over Coventry City and Reading early in the campaign.
I love going to the hotel gym, or reading, or catching up on emails in bed over a giant pot of Earl Grey tea.
I'm thankful that it's almost over and I'm feeling well enough to catch up on some reading for my classes.
Finally catching up on my blog reading and FINALLY drooling over this recipe.
The week has been a busy one again, I have a wedding next weekend that I am busy preparing for, and then I have a few weeks break before it all kicks off again, so I'm hoping to be able to catch up on a few things over the next... Read more»
Severe storms at the USF Tampa campus pushed me off campus this afternoon, and I've used it in part to catch up on reading, such as Joy Ann Williamson - Lott's article «The Battle over Power, Control, and Academic Freedom at Southern Institutions of Higher Education, 1955 — 1965» ($ $) in last November's Journal of Southern History.
The library includes over 10,000 Marvel comics, starting from the very first issue and going up to as recently as six months ago, so it's a great gift for newbies who want to catch up on 70 years of continuity as well as nostalgia freaks who want to read all the comics they had as a kid (and their mother threw away).
So, its not a service to read the newest stuff, but catch up on the stuff you might have missed over the years.
Apple has been more vocal and is rumored to have caught up to the Kindle in device volume over just three months with its 3.27 million iPad sales, although only some owners ever intend to read non-web content on Apple's tablet.
If you're new to this, and want to catch up on the state of game criticism - or if you just had your head in the sand for the last twelve - to - eighteen months like I did, then get over there and get reading.
In my attempts to catch up on lots of literature published over the past year that I missed, I finally read the 2012 paper China's Long Road to a Low - Carbon Economy: An Institutional Analysis by Philip Andrews - Speed, one of the first and foremost international commentators on China's energy economy.
4 Aug: Crikey: Ellen Sandell: Abbott's European holiday might make him hot and bothered Abbott seems to still be confused about the science of climate change, moving between «climate change is absolute crap» and aligning himself with the climate deniers, and at other times accepting that climate change is a problem, but just not one worth acting efficiently on... All of this will be news to most Europeans, who have long accepted the science of climate change and have been measuring their CO2 emissions in tonnes through the trading scheme, and are benefiting from climate change solutions... Studies predict an increase of up to 6.1 million jobs in 2050, and the EU - wide emissions trading scheme is expected to generate between $ 143 billion and $ 296 billion over the next six years... Maybe on the plane on the way home to Australia, Abbott could use the time to catch up on some reading.
Wayne, Re: tree rings Over the previous two years there has been so much discussion on tree ring issues on WUWT and at CLIMATE AUDIT and elsewhere (some of it very technical) that it will take you many hours of reading to catch up.
Head over here to learn more about Surface Book 2 coming to all Surface markets, catch up on the news about the Sea of Thieves Closed Beta, or,... Read more
It's been an action - packed week between announcing Xbox One X and showing 42 new titles at E3, and the availability of the new Surface Pro, Surface Laptop, and Windows 10 S. Head over here to catch up on all the Xbox news out of our E3 Briefing, check out the new gaming devices announced at E3 by ORIGIN PC and Alienware and Dell — or, keep reading for what's new in the Windows Store!
It's been an action - packed week between announcing Xbox One X and showing 42 new titles at E3, and the availability of the new Surface Pro, Surface Laptop, and Windows 10 Head over here to catch up on all the Xbox... Read more
Head over here to catch up on the news out of Imagine Cup, check out our Windows 10 Tip on getting started with Windows Help Me Choose, dive into... Read more
I caught up on some computer work in one of the rooms over there one day, and spent the other two wandering around camp, taking pictures and reading.
but didn't know if it was too mature for a toddler... then I got bored at work and found my way over to the Pioneer Woman to catch up on some reading and saw you guys on her other links page..
It went something like this: hotel check - in, locate room, locate wifi service, attempt connection to wifi, wonder why the connection is taking so long, try again, locate phone, call front desk, get told «the internet is broken for a while», decide to hot - spot the mobile phone because some emails really needed to be sent, go «la la la» about the roaming costs, locate iron, wonder why iron temperature dial just spins around and around, swear as iron spews water instead of steam, find reading glasses, curse middle - aged need for reading glasses, realise iron temperature dial is indecipherably in Chinese, decide ironing front of shirt is good enough when wearing jacket, order room service lunch, start shower, realise can't read impossible small toiletry bottle labels, damply retrieve glasses from near iron and successfully avoid shampooing hair with body lotion, change (into slightly damp shirt), retrieve glasses from shower, start teleconference, eat lunch, remember to mute phone, meet colleague in lobby at 1 pm, continue teleconference, get in taxi, endure 75 stop - start minutes to a inconveniently located client, watch unread emails climb over 150, continue to ignore roaming costs, regret tuna panini lunch choice as taxi warmth, stop - start juddering, jet - lag, guilt about unread emails and traffic fumes combine in a very unpleasant way, stumble out of over-warm taxi and almost catch hypothermia while trying to locate a very small client office in a very large anonymous business park, almost hug client with relief when they appear to escort us the last 50 metres, surprisingly have very positive client meeting (i.e. didn't throw up in the meeting), almost catch hypothermia again waiting for taxi which despite having two functioning GPS devices can't locate us on a main road, understand why as within 30 seconds we are almost rendered unconscious by the in - car exhaust fumes, discover that the taxi ride back to the CBD is even slower and more juddering at peak hour (and no, that was not a carbon monoxide induced hallucination), rescheduled the second client from 5 pm to 5.30, to 6 pm and finally 6.30 pm, killed time by drafting this guest blog (possibly carbon monoxide induced), watch unread emails climb higher, exit taxi and inhale relatively fresher air from kamikaze motor scooters, enter office and grumpily work with client until 9 pm, decline client's gracious offer of expensive dinner, noting it is already midnight my time, observe client fail to correctly set office alarm and endure high decibel «warning, warning» sounds that are clearly designed to send security rushing... soon... any second now... develop new form of nausea and headache from piercing, screeching, sounds - like - a-wailing-baby-please-please-make-it-stop-alarm, note the client is relishing the extra (free) time with us and is still talking about work, admire the client's ability to focus under extreme aural pressure, decide the client may be a little too work focussed, realise that I probably am too given I have just finished work at 9 pm... but then remember the 200 unread emails in my inbox and decide I can resolve that incongruency later (in a quieter space), become sure that there are only two possibilities — there are no security staff or they are deaf — while my colleague frantically tries to call someone who knows what to do, conclude after three calls that no - one does, and then finally someone finally does and... it stops.
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