The starving artist cliche didn't come from nowhere.
The manager speaks the same meaningless
cliches he did 20 years ago.
So don't complain that the cliches don't make sense.
Owners often assume that rescued dogs are scared of men because they were possibly were abused by men, however, this cliche doesn't always hold true.
However, just because it's a clich doesn't mean it's not true.
Not exact matches
An old management
cliche says when a successful, well - loved leader retires, you don't really want that job.
Let's all join in a group shrug: another suit
doing the perp walk, a
cliche by now.
These kinds of
cliches have little to no meaning, they're just verbal fluff, and they don't add anything to what you're saying.
In business circles, a cynic might adapt this
cliche to say, «Those who can't
do, network.»
Forget the specifics, for a paragraph, because this is a notable development: while these hearings usually devolve into partisan
cliches with the same talking points — Democrats want regulations, and Republicans don't — yesterday Senators from both sides of the aisle expressed unease with Facebook's handling of private data; obviously Democrats tried to tie the issue to the last election, but that made the Republicans» shared concern all - the - more striking.
The biggest change, by far, that I've noticed has nothing
do to with working in pajamas or any other number of remote work
cliches.
It's not that I don't feel like I can, I can... but is that in the vocabulary of the one who I worship, if it's not then why would I as His Son want to take on what is not His, my Father's nature... The versions of the Bible I've read seem to think that words are powerful and speaking them is an action and can even change physics if used properly... Again, the scriptures speak for themselves and circumventing the topical study with christiany
cliche come - backs doesn't answer or annul anything that the Word has to say on the matter.
You obviously didn't understand what the article is about... Just the usual Christian
Cliches which don't apply to real life
It may be a
cliche, but it's true: We always want what we can't (or just don't) have.
I have spent thousands of years surrounded by millions of sycophanty people like Frederica and HeavenSent, all
doing nothing other than brown - nosing me endlessly and repeating the same old
cliches over and over.
I thought we were really close...» And as the old
cliche goes, «it's most often the people you've
done the most for.»
I just want to say that, Yes God
does work in mysterious way to be
cliche.
Many fellow believers
do not stray from the insular circle of the church community where they are content to «edify» one another with well - worn Christian
cliches.
These are more than
cliche - swaggering words to me, this is the raw begging in my veins: I have
done things I would rather die a thousand deaths than for even one person to ever know.
Again, sorry if folks have been unkind, but I have heard the
cliche that if it's not hard to
do, it's not worth
doing.
WWJD has become a
cliche, but honestly Tony — is venting this level of vindictiveness through the legal process what Jesus would have
done?
Yes, I am so tired of the
cliches too, and a Christianity that seems only to be concerned with sin management...
do this, don't
do that.
One, by discouraging knowledge and just repeating ethics and
cliches, they can control people to
do their bidding instead of God's bidding.
It doesn't offer
cliche answers.
This is so
cliche, but that doesn't negate its validity.
Everyday I'm learning new ways to abandon religious
cliches» and put on Christ; which He told me to
do in the first place.
It would be nice if some pastor, some where in the US, would be willing to equip the Saints and help them get to know God more instead of instilling guilt because they're not
doing enough and when they ask for the pastor to lay off the hackneyed
cliches even once in a while, they get something other than «knowledge puffs up, but love edifies.»
They already know all the
cliches and they don't want to be preached at or given tips on how to be more spiritual in the midst of their pain.
For me, I don't mind some of the «
cliches».
These statements are little more than Christian
cliches, and aside from not helping anybody, they
do not accurately represent God or Scripture.
Your cavalier use of the
cliche «they just don't get it,» only serves as more fuel for anti-Catholic bigotry that seeks to minimize Catholic teachings such as the ministerial priesthood, same - sex marriage and abortion.
Please
do not use that sanctimonious «oh, you must have been wounded»
cliche.
Doing a long series of arithmetical calculations or working all day entering data at a computer terminal may result in almost total «an - aesthesia,» while proving a new mathematical theorem or writing a complex computer program may bring about intense involvement and the enjoyment of vivid immediate experience.8 «Aesthetic» experience in the more usual sense of tile term can also y ~ ry fi - om trivial to highly intense, even when it relates to a single object; one is reminded of the
cliche situation in which one member of a couple listens in rapture to a concert while the other writhes in boredom.
It's amazing how hard it is for people to deal with those that don't believe in god, constantly trying to apply religious group
cliches to a group whose only common characteristic is a non-belief in a deity.
Atheists are cheap and lazy and all they'll
do is mouth off
cliche after
cliche.
This is a bit of a
cliche but I really
do believe that we should be concerned with being ourselves rather than fulfilling other people's ideas of who or what we should be.
I'm sure he doesn't realize what a
cliche he's become.
One offered the
cliche: «If you don't know where you're going, any road will take you there.»
Although it's pretty, politically correct and
cliche» to say: «Jesus LOVES EVERYONE AND EVERYTHING», the truth of the matter is that the book of Revelation talks about a time when Jesus will spill a LOT of blood on the earth and will
do so in order to establish peace and order and to return the planet to its original, paradise form.
The more fundamentalist a church gets the more it becomes a mere propaganda machine holding to
cliches like «be in the world not of it», «love the sinner, hate the sin», and «you don't understand because you don't have faith».
I
did not want to speak in
cliches.
d) Don't ever, EVER ask for teachings that go beyond the familiar
cliches.
I know it's a massive
cliche, but things like yoga now make me so happy, and I find it a lot less isolating to think that I'm leaving a party earlier than I would would have
done in another life to go to bed but I» l wake up feeling well and that means I get to go to a class I love in the morning.
I know it's
cliche, but I really
do think that food tastes better when it's made with love.
I know it sounds
cliche, but I'm completely committed to
doing things that make me happy this year, including (watch how I connect this) eating more Mexican food.
Don't kill me because I sound
cliche, but y ’ all... it's hot outside.
So I thought it would be fun
do a quick round - up of my favorite healthy foods that make me a proud card - carrying blogger
cliche.
It's an old
cliche I know, but the more you repeat somethng, the more likely it is to be true, but I really
do believe that this BELIEF is rubbing off on the fans as well.
I know it sounds like a
cliche (not to mention that it also implies that sometimes Arsenal
DO NOT always defend together), but our little Spaniard Santi Cazorla thinks that he has found the secret to Arsenal's winning run — particularly when talking about our spectacular success over Liverpool this weekend.
He doesn't move the needle — the
cliche we see thrown around every time he comes back or tees it up on Tour.