Sentences with phrase «conversation points too»

It can also create conversation points too so that parents can start a dialogue — this is great for when there are school trips and parents can still interact hundreds of miles away!
So just relax, go armed with a few fun or interesting stories about yourself and remember that you can use your environment and where the date takes place as a source of conversation points too!

Not exact matches

We've had some market volatility this year that we've seen that may make some investors uncomfortable, but the reality of it is, the conversations we were having up to this point is, make sure you rebalance your portfolio to make sure that you're not taking on too much equity risk, and that your asset allocation is aligned to meet your goals.
The presence of other divergences too (David Moss's luminous piece on friendship stands very well alone), the dispersal of the group on both sides of the Atlantic, and the fact that some members are already deep into other conversations all suggest that as a movement it will (at least in Britain) either fragment or at best fare like feminist, liberation and nonrealist theologies, and have its main influence as a point of reference and interrogation.
A friend of mine in Germany, a broadcaster of religious programs, once commented rather plaintively: «Is it asking too much when one asks the parson just for once, just once, to talk as a normal man to normal men, brief and to the point, without mincing matters, in a natural tone of voice, almost as in a friendly conversation
Having engaged in far too many seemingly endless and usually fruitless discussions about the word «inerrancy,» I am both convicted and encouraged by McKnight's reminder here that «having the right view [of the Bible] isn't the point of the Bible... We must begin an entirely new conversation that gets us beyond the right view of the Bible to one that seeks to answer this question, «What is our relationship to the God of the Bible?»
A straightforward, elegantly written, concise, and well - organized 215 pages, Back in the Game stands out in a crowded field, not just as a primer on concussions for a parent, coach, or athletes, but for its incisive and often pointed criticism of the way our national conversation about concussions and the long - term effects of playing contact and collision sports has been shaped - some would say warped - by a media that too often eschews fact - based reporting in favor of sensationalism and fear - mongering.
after being in this kind of relationship for all this years you start to question everything about yourself you think you must be too fat or too ugly for a few years I thought what was the point in leaving him if my own husband doesn't want who else is going to want me I must of had the conversation about how our situation was affecting me over 1000 times when he did bother to come near me like once every 5 - 8 months he'd say it wasn't enjoyable for him because I was very awkward but he never understood the reason I was uncomfortable how are you supposed to feel good about yourself when you know your husband would rather look at other women online
We have to understand when he is uncomfortable with strangers, friends, or acquaintances that we may have to remove him from the situation when it has become too taxing, whether or not we fee like ending the conversation or leaving at that point.
Conversation, too, tends to be maddeningly circuitous, with points made about the picture's Luddite slant and made again for good measure and made a third time because both men have evidently arrived at the same unspoken conclusion: that Seabiscuit is no enigma.
There are occasions when the dialogue is perhaps too pointed, but the remainder of the intriguing conversations and romantic gestures more than make up for it.
Weissbourd stresses that lying is all too common with children, citing the statistic that 95 percent will «lie to their parents at some point,» but parents should view these instances as part of an ongoing conversation on the importance of honesty and integrity.
But nothing was making her happy; recently, in the course of conversation, he'd pointed that out, too.
We've had some market volatility this year that we've seen that may make some investors uncomfortable, but the reality of it is, the conversations we were having up to this point is, make sure you rebalance your portfolio to make sure that you're not taking on too much equity risk, and that your asset allocation is aligned to meet your goals.
I'd say you gave it a point too many, but then again I did call the game «artistic vandalism» in conversation.
At the risk of giving too much away, most of the little book involves conversations between Judas, who has been having various wild visions (the other disciples have also been experiencing them), and Jesus, who is at one point busy digging his own grave.
Aaron Street: Yeah, and so that then led to a conversation about kind of the bias, inherent in personas and I think one of the traps that it's important to not get too caught up in is in this context, bias absolutely can include things like race and gender and orientation and disability status, but the bigger point is that they can be biases having nothing to do with kind of demographic identity.
Our first conversation about the report was informed by a powerful blog post by Chelsea Vowel, writing as âpihtawikosisân, where she pointed out too many public commentaries were coming from those who had not yet read the report.
Unfortunately, Artificial Intelligence (or AI) is a polysemy or «suitcase term» — arguably it encompasses too many disparate topics to be a useful starting point for conversations about legal innovation.
(If that sounds too - early - to - be-true, at one point in the conversation, Lilin even delightedly showed a selfie of himself with McCaleb).
If you've sent a text message at any point in the last few years, you've probably become all too familiar with emoji, those colorful icons that now seem to pepper online conversations.
So, too, is keeping in mind the problems the couple came to therapy to solve, even when the conversation is strategically pointed in other directions.
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