Sentences with phrase «caution against letting»

We caution against letting cats outdoors, but if you do — or if a window or door is left open — a safety collar and an ID tag may be what bring your missing cat home.
I do caution against letting your book be written by committee.
Schools that have experience with teen pregnancy also caution against letting students drop off the radar screen after they give birth.
The messiness of history is a caution against letting sentimentality take over Christmas; so are some challenging truths about Mary, Joseph, and their place in what theologians call the «economy of salvation.»
James B. Hurley, in Man and Woman in Biblical Perspective (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1981) suggests Paul cautions against letting the hair down and loose (rather than keeping it done up).
She cautions against letting your baby depend on «props» such as nursing, patting, and rocking to get to sleep.
LLL does not agree with the cautions against letting baby fall asleep at the breast or holding a sleeping baby or child.
Parents are strongly urged to exercise greater care in monitoring this program and are cautioned against letting children under the age of 14 watch unattended.
Sailing on the Frieze ferry to Randall's Island, the driver continued to tell us that we were on our way to vacation, but cautioned against letting loose.

Not exact matches

But let me caution him against any conception of novelty that is based on ignorance of what our immediate ancestors have been up to.
I've seen others caution against rising more than 18 hours, so maybe I let it rise too long.
The IFS also cautioned against signing long - term leases to let private firms manage key roads, saying the Government should consider carefully whether this would compromise the ability to implement national road pricing in the future.
IN the documentary, «An Inconvenient Truth», Al Gore used the tale of a frog in a warming container not jumping out, but rather boiling to death, as a caution against inaction, against letting small changes, small increases in temperature, go unaddressed.
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