Sentences with phrase «deep impression in»

Mark my words, he'll make a deep impression in climate.
The boys, particularly Mr. Webber as Pete, are astonishingly good, and Ms. Monaghan, who looks like a slightly more tomboyish Liv Tyler, makes a deep impression in a minor role.
The pronunciation would catch anyone off guard in the first place and undoubtedly leave a deep impression in them.

Not exact matches

Sure, if you spend all your time in the feel - good blogosphere you get the impression that the old school command - and - control style of management is dead and everybody has their Neanderthal brains safely chained up in a deep dark dungeon somewhere.
A deeper impression can be left on users when you create custom tweets to make your tweet striking in the sense that people would not miss your tweet.
In moments of fear and terror a bonding of the deepest sort occurred between blacks and whites — a fact that made a deep impression.
Nevertheless, I left the institution with the deep impression that the school, in its own unique way, was deeply committed to its religious tradition.
The descriptions of Paradise are in such beautiful language that they make a deep impression on anyone who listens to the recital of the parts of the Qur» an which refer to it.
I began to grasp what the Friends mean by being «visited by a spiritual presence... drawn from a deeper well... illuminated with a brighter light, [letting] those impressions dwell in you...»
Behind these works and underlying their organismic philosophy were Bergson's Creative Evolution, which had made a deep impression on Wieman, and the radical empirical writings of William James, especially Pluralistic Universe and Essays in Radical Empiricism.
The poverty of so many people in India made a deep and lasting impression on me.
Ah, so much is said about human want and misery — I seek to understand it, I have also had some acquaintance with it at close range; so much is said about wasted lives — but only that man's life is wasted who lived on, so deceived by the joys of life or by its sorrows that he never became eternally and decisively conscious of himself as spirit, as self, or (what is the same thing) never became aware and in the deepest sense received an impression of the fact that there is a God, and that he, he himself, his self, exists before this God, which gain of infinity is never attained except through despair.
As others will certainly tell you, the most immediate impression you get of Dr. West when in his presence is that this is a person of deep, seemingly limitless joy.
In our relationship to others, to our own selves, to nature, and to society we have all received the impression that there is always something more beneath the surface, no matter how deep we go.
The sensuous imagery of vestments, candles, bells, and other physical media of worship, the solemn hush of the assembly as the prayers of the ages are said, the bowed head, the bended knee, the music which is never frolicsome but searching in its simple cadences — all this tends to produce an impression of worship which even without much ideological content is deep and compelling.
Israelite law, in its present total impression, has its deepest roots in the creation faith.
The world constituted for us by this mode of experience «is in fact a secondary meta - world, in other words, a world which, in itself and in its deepest reality, bears the deep impression of many systems and theories and which can therefore only be experienced and possibly changed in and through these systems and theories».8 It is clear that Metz would like to overcome this evolutionary world and replace it, at least for Christians, by the apocalyptic one.
Although he fosters the impression that his policies are grounded in deep religious conviction, the reality is often the reverse.
While my first negative impression of Schuller was somewhat modified after a week's exposure to his institute and the testimonies of other pastors who spoke in glowing terms of how their own ministries had taken on new life after they followed some of Schuller's principles, I still have some deep theological problems with these principles.
During the annual Eranos meetings in Ascona in the years 1951 to 1955, Joachim Wach often told me about the deep impression that the contact with the living forms of religious expression in modern Islam and Hinduism had made on him during his travels in Morocco and India.
But in the thirty years I've known him, I've always had the impression that it was his advocacy for those who were both persecuted and voiceless that kept him in the game and offered him the deepest of satisfactions in his public service.
It made a deep impression upon the king who ordered a thoroughgoing reform in accord with its principles.
Holding has made quite the impression since being thrown in at the deep end in Arsenal's defence.
As the report refers to those «suspected» of having suffered damage, presumably hospitals, having much to lose, are more likely to refer borderline cases — whereas one gets the impression that many homebirth midwives optimistically opt for «fine» if not actually obviously in deep trouble.
At a deeper level, there is a sense that the British left, unlike its American counterpart, does not «get» the web - an impression summed up in the contrasting performance of its leaders.
Listening to the opposition candidates fosters the impression that Ynys Mon is deep in the mire, stagnating under the weight of a recession which has brought job losses and misery.
But an in - depth analysis of grant data from the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) on page 1015 in this issue of Science finds that the problem goes much deeper than impressions.
The ensuing 2 - hour discussion on Michael's Ph.D. left a deep impression on him scientifically and because of the generosity shown by Brenner in spending so much time with an unknown graduate student on a Saturday afternoon.
He has repeatedly expressed that Isaac Asimov's seminal Foundation trilogy (about «psychohistorians» who use mathematical models to predict the future) made a deep impression on him in his youth.
Wildlife in Kenya made a deep impression on the 36 - year - old Ivy League - educated, Washington insider.
During normal walking, the weight - bearing foot undergoes a highly stereotypical movement and pressure distribution pattern in which the heel contacts the ground first, making a relatively deep impression on the substrate.
As a consequence, the deepest part of a footprint often occurs beneath the first and second metatarsal heads, that along with a deep hallucal impression corresponds to the peak pressures at toe - off... This contrasts with the less stereotypical pattern of footfall observed in African apes during quadrupedal and bipedal locomotion.
The video below shows the difference between Clean and Power Clean clearly, the first 2 impressions are a Power Clean, the 3rd impression is a Clean (catching in a much deeper position)
Kat made a real impression at the premiere in this deep red embroidered sleeveless dress from the Spring 2014 collection.
Chic contemporary bathroom is lit by gray glass and brass dome light pendants hung on either side of a Cooper Classics Andy Wall Mirror mounted to Hayden Dual Listello Tiles by Stone Impressions in the Deep Blue Cararra Marble.
The blue dress Elsa wears in Frozen, a famous Disney animated movie, may give you deep impression.
If your primary characteristic, the initial impression you see in your natural coloring, is Light, Deep, Bright or Muted, you will find both Warm and Cool colors.
My friends first impression to me is that I'm so danm serious and strict but when they know me better and deeper they say i «m «FRiendly» and a a friend who always be with them in times of trouble and hardship...
• Oscar Isaac, who made his deepest previous impression on me in Nicolas Winding Refn's Drive, has his coming - out party as a major talent here: In almost any year other than 2013, he would have been a lock for a Best Actor nominatioin Nicolas Winding Refn's Drive, has his coming - out party as a major talent here: In almost any year other than 2013, he would have been a lock for a Best Actor nominatioIn almost any year other than 2013, he would have been a lock for a Best Actor nomination.
«The Black Stallion» inspired plenty of kiddie animal movies, but it's deeper impression is in films that try to recreate that feeling of being a child through intimate camerawork and editing that simulates how the mind takes in information.
My first impressions of Galactic Civilizations III is that it's a 4X game that ticks all the requisite boxes: a deep tech tree which requires some thought - out decision making from the player in terms of research focus; the provision of some very expansive maps; customisation; an instinctive AI; numerous paths to victory.
He was in The Shimmer, of course, and it's here that sci - fi fans may start to recognize the phantom impression of Andrei Tarkovsky's deep - think genre classics, films like Solaris or Stalker, the latter similarly concerned with the traversing of a mysterious realm.
By failing in one, Casshern, like many others, ultimately fails to leave a deep impression.
Dave Franco plays wannabe actor Greg Sestero (writer of the tell - all book on which this is based), a blandly handsome San Francisco suburbanite who falls in with the secretive, much - older Wiseau (James Franco, building an eerily accurate impression based mainly on The Room and its creator's inscrutable persona, but nothing deeper).
First things first, the 2.35:1 anamorphic widescreen transfer is soft and lacking in deep blacks, giving off the impression of a LaserDisc image rather than a DVD circa 2003.
In the movie's design, Faulkner's novel functions chiefly as a source of imagery and atmosphere; a good chunk of the dialogue is unintelligible (it's doubtful that even viewers raised in the Deep South will be able to understand more than a third of what Tim Blake Nelson says), which creates the impression that the characters are as textural as the swaying trees in the backgrounIn the movie's design, Faulkner's novel functions chiefly as a source of imagery and atmosphere; a good chunk of the dialogue is unintelligible (it's doubtful that even viewers raised in the Deep South will be able to understand more than a third of what Tim Blake Nelson says), which creates the impression that the characters are as textural as the swaying trees in the backgrounin the Deep South will be able to understand more than a third of what Tim Blake Nelson says), which creates the impression that the characters are as textural as the swaying trees in the backgrounin the background.
Road Rage — Roger Bell does battle with an unspoiled example of Aston Martin's 1950s warhorse the DB3S / Bugatti Type 46s Exposed — Another in our exclusive series of James Allington colour cutaway drawings this time with descriptive text by the author / Nearly Great part II — HRG authority Ian Dussek concludes his enthralling two - part article on the Twin Cam with his driving impressions of a rare survivor / Imperial Splendour — Walter Chrysler's 1930 Imperial was hardly radical but was the epitome of sound luxury car design / The Eternal Bridesmaid — Jan Norbye feels Benz deserves more laurels than it usually gets / Glorious Goodwood — Seen through the lens of renowned racing photographer Alan Smith / Distant Memory — Michael Worthington - Williams digs deep to research the histories of three obscure but tantalising British marques of the 1920s.
But the pure performance of the 812 in a straight line, and the traction it somehow manages to generate, even on quite bumpy roads, are what leave you with the deepest impression of all.
Ludvigsen's London library — Tom Threlfall discovers Carl Ludvigsen's motoring reference library in deepest Pentonville / The Henry Royce Foundation — Jonathan Wood visited the Foundation's archives and museum at the Hunt House at Paulerspury / 1935 Armstrong Siddeley Special — Malcolm Robertson gives us his impressions of a pristine example of this sporting limousine / 1924 Standard — Ray Cattle writes with affection about his well - preserved V3 Kenilworth model / 1929 Rolls - Royce 20 — This month the Editor describes his encounter with a «small» Rolls - Royce / Sir Herbert Austin's letter — Some fascinating correspondence between Sir Herbert Austin and Henry Ford has been discovered by David G. Jones / Restoration techniques — Zoe Harrison reports on the course on vehicle restoration techniques run by the North Warwickshire College.
Bass was unfortunately lacking in this system, as deeper notes barely made an impression in the cabin.
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