Sentences with phrase «completely back up my point»

I had no idea what his completion stats were when I first posted, but they completely back up my point that he was a very high talent player (GOAT level) but pissed it away by deciding it was not worth the effort.

Not exact matches

We now insist that the likes of Chambers and Welbeck are «not fit to wear the Arsenal shirt» and completely miss the point that they haven't earned the right yet, they are not starters, and are there buried in a deep squad as back - up if required.
By that point I was pumping enough milk in a day to completely supply another baby's feeds and have some extra for back up.
Just Because: At some point all babies * go through some kind of five - star sleep regression where they completely forget how to sleep through the night, and start waking up in shorter and shorter intervals until they've gone completely back to newborn sleep patterns — including, of course, the complete inability to self - soothe or fall asleep without parental aid (preferably in the form of singing).
I contacted POF about the profile still showing up in «Favorites» after it was hidden, and their answer completely missed the point, so I sent another email back — but no answer yet.
Diane Yunek, membership coordinator for the DeKalb County Farm Bureau in Sycamore, Ill., and her husband gave up credit cards completely five years ago and swears they'll never be tempted back by points.
There are check points to make life that bit easier so if you do lose control of your body completely and nose dive over the level's edges, you hopefully won't end up too far back.
At this point in this review, I'm going to be completely honest, after 8 hours of playing Citizens of Earth I gave up with it, the back tracking and continuous amount of side quests that the game kept giving me became far too much, and left me ultimately feeling overwhelmed.
So varied are the works the survey includes that this would have been unsettling enough had Lüpertz not shown up days before the show's opening and decided to completely disorganise curator Dorothy Kosinski's carefully planned chronological hang so that pieces could relate to one another back and forth between various points in his career.
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