Sentences with phrase «commented on any of her blog»

Then I went off and Googled to see if I'd ever written anything about Rebecca Eckler or if I'd ever commented on any of her blog posts.
thanks for the invite i do not know how to blog if i did i would try it but i will read and comment on all of the blogs i would also like to enter the contests thanks to all and i love the pics above the kids are so beautiful
Leave me a comment on any of these blogs and let me know if you have any questions, or if I can help you further!
I don't normally comment on any of the blogs I read, but I made this bundt cake and it was excellent!
i totally love them:) thank you for your nice comments on both of my blogs.
Although Videogame History Museum encourages commenting on all of its blogs or other posts, comments posted by guests are not the opinion of Videogame History Museum, and Videogame History Museum reserves the right to remove any comments which it determines to be off - topic, inappropriate, or offensive.
Not only will you be able to post comments on any of the blogs, but also it will give us a way to reach you with additional information about the e-Drive bill.
thanks for the invite i do not know how to blog if i did i would try it but i will read and comment on all of the blogs i would also like to enter the contests thanks to all and i love the pics above the kids are so beautiful

Not exact matches

Even including the spammed comment, 59 % of all 1.1 million comments still favored net neutrality, Fossett said on his blog.
Make it part of your 2015 plan to create a comment policy, and make it visible on your blog and social media profiles.
«I toiled over design and print, I shared my thoughts on everything (come on guys, you know I'm opinionated), and I ended up with a limited collection of pieces that reflect facets of my personal style that I think (hope, pray, hold - my - breath - and - wait - for - the - comments - on - Insta), that you'll love,» Markle wrote on her blog at the time.
Whether it's on Twitter, Facebook, Yelp or even in the comments section of a blog, anyone can say anything at any time and with any frequency.
Sure, you can lay some foundations like following them on social media, commenting on their blog and interacting with their communities, but sooner or later you'll need to get your content where it matters — in front of their eyeballs.
In a email, Coinbase declined to comment on the IRS's reported decision not to seek passwords, and referred Fortune to a blog post from March in which the company said it is pushing the agency to reduce the scope of the probe.
Even though I was trying to promote my posts on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and in the comments of other blogs, I had barely broken 100 views a day.
Many of the comments on the Developers Blog post were negative.
Leaving comments on other popular blogs has also increased the number of people who visit Updegraff's website and, subsequently, view her eBay items.
Subscribers lashed out at Hastings on Facebook, Twitter, and in the comments area of the company's own blog.
Great post all point from # 1 to # 21 are awesome but i like # 1 and # 6 form these Both options work really very well for better response in online marketing if we will leave comment on another blog post then this option might be gives to us many back links and we know very well how important role of Social Media sites these all sites will give to us much huge number of traffic for better productivity.
For example, if you want to connect with Darren Rowse for the first time, knowing that direct contact may not be useful at this level, you may instead leave a significant comment on one of his blog posts, about 200 — 300 words in length, that offers something helpful to his readers.
Even better, look at the kind of comments people like your personas leave on those blog posts.
Sharing and engaging include such things as commenting on someone else's blog or Facebook post, quoting a tweet and adding your take, sharing a photo of somebody else, or responding to somebody who has said something that interests you.
I also suggested that if you are part of a team blog such as Savvy one of the things we did in the early days was to comment on each others posts.
Top tip: Commenting on other blogs in your niche is a great tactic to increase the visibility of your own blog.
It was out of necessity that I approve comments and sometimes require an account (depending on the blog).
With Copyblogger removing comments from their blog the other day I think you are hitting the nail on the head with some of your ideas here.
Content Engagement — The opportunity to drive your followers or website visitors to engage some sort of activity, such as commenting on a blog post, sharing it on social media, retweeting a blog post, etc..
I can fish them out of the spam filter when it's my own post, but it means I have given up commenting on other people's posts, both here and on other blogs, if they use Typepad.
It never ceases to amaze me how many people in blog comments, on forums etc, see bonds as a 100 % nailed - on appalling investment over the next coming years without any trace of humility.
I'll be commenting periodically on portfolio holdings and specific positions on this blog, along with continued discussion of investment theory.
Edwin; There's a difference between providing blog comment guidelines and having to nofollow the outgoing links on your blog because of spam issues.
On a related note, since you mentioned «blog comments» in the article, I'm also seriously considering removing comments from my site... I rarely get any comments, and I think you're right with your assessment of social media's impact in this regard.
I can't believe some of the comments people have posted on these blogs recently, but unfortunately I have to believe that they did, in fact, post them, for example
I've been acting as a bit of a fly on the wall of this blog for a few weeks now, but I saw this cartoon, felt my heart break, read the comments, felt my heart break even more, slept on it, woke up with a still - aching heart, and so thought it appropriate that I break my silence.
Neither are most of the people commenting on this blog.
Does this «Hitler was an atheist,» boondoggle have to be rebut - ted in every single comments section of every single article posted on this blog?
I feel I can comment on the effect of the naked pastor's blog on me, and whether pastors can and should say these things in general, but as for whether or not it beneficial for the church members of his church, surely it is only for them to say, and perhaps not online..?
I prophecy that sometime in the next 3 pages of comments on this blog, someone going by the handle «Atheism is Not Healthy for Children and Other Living Things» will post a message that comprises, in its entirety, the words «Prayer changes things.»
I began to notice areas I felt some pressure to conform: sometimes I feel an unspoken pressure from the institution and individuals within it to adhere to a preset systemization of belief and morality; sometimes I allow a comment left on my blog or criticism from other bloggers to intimidate me into conformity; sometimes I feel afraid to let what I really believe to leak out of my mouth; sometimes I allow criticism of the way I oversee our community, or criticism of our community itself, to frighten me into silence, passivity and paralysis.
But what frustrates me on this blog are posters that make a comment by way of a sermon / declaration / pontification and then do not stick around to refute any replies that are made that the poster may disagree with.
Oddly, the comments were made in an interview with the Oakland Press back in 2012 and in a blog post they wrote the same year, but are just now on the receiving end of social media outrage.
Because if you read through the comments in these blogs, you'll notice that what many atheists despise the most is when the extremely fundamentally religious judge their fellow man based on their exaggerated interpretation of the Bible, neither of which they can credibly give justification for.
I'm going to go out on a limb here «Bottom Line», and assume for the sake of argument that you've never been dead.How else can the readers of this blog ascertain how asinine your comment is if you haven't?
This particular instance feels similar to many of the other great «Christian Controversies» of the past 15 years — Rob Bell with Love Wins, John McCarthur with his comments on the Pentecostal and Charismatic movement, Don Miller's blog about church.
I just got wind of this blog at church this morning and I figured that I would comment on it.
Exactly, your facetious comment demonstrates the superfluousness of these types of comments on a belief blog.
I was thinking about this earlier today, so it was with great appreciation that I read the following comment on the blog of Alan Knox, who was quoting Arthur Sido at his blog, The Voice of One Crying Out in Suburbia:
To those that may be concerned; I was not talking to Dalahast but making a comment about his quite obvious pattern of behaviour on this blog.
I would say to any person commenting on your 10 Ways the Non-Violent Atonement Changes Your Theology blog, to read your book first (its not an expensive purchase) before launching into any detailed discussion or disagreement.It answers many of the potential concerns people have and gets the reader to reflect very strongly on what they have been taught about the atonement and to put on a new set of glasses when reading scripture.
I have attempted to post 3 separate comments on the blog post by R.L. Stollar... NONE of them has been posted.
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