Sentences with phrase «done at least a little»

It usually does at least a little.
I don't even really have decorations or at least I didn't until my 3 year old went to preschool this year and it became apparent that I needed to start doing at least a little something for it.
And I always do at least a little editing — especially when the white balance gets thrown off like that!
I actually read and researched a lot about starting a blog prior to blogging, so I knew from the beginning that I had to do at least a little promoting, but I didn't understand how hard it is to actually get traffic to your site.
My blanket scarf poncho was one of my most - worn items last winter and I have gotten a lot of questions from people on How to wear a blanket scarf poncho... and while I know that lots of «how to wear a blanket scarf» posts have been done, I wanted to do it at least a little differently.
Genre exercises that are really stealth critiques of American mores are fine and dandy, but please, let us do at least a little bit of the interpretive work ourselves.
You seem to do this at least a little with your «I invested more into my education» argument.
We're pretty risk - sensitive, but this money will be untouched for decades, so we'd like it to do at least a little work, but without too much risk of loss.
It means more than just looking out for your own economic self - interest; it's doing at least a little to «save the planet.»
Second, it shows hiring managers that you did at least a little research into what they are looking for and that you're not just mass applying all over the place with the same generic resume.

Not exact matches

And it's probably enough to convince those who don't need the cash to stay on the sideline — at least until the wider market looks a little more bullish.
This likely has at least a little to do with the below - average cost of living and the year - round warm temperatures.
Even if you don't have kids, getting older and having the desire for a little more convenience go hand in hand, which means that eventually at least some millennials are going to see the appeal of living in the suburbs.
«Such narrowly targeted sanctions have little to no impact on the operations of Russia's intelligence services or its proxies, since these organizations don't transact (at least overtly) through the US financial system,» Carpenter wrote.
All over America, officials argued that there's very little that can be done to prevent mass violence like the attack that killed at least 58 people in Las Vegas.
thinking about that as a niche, or at least the jewelry... not sure - I am too overwhelmed right now and just hoping it gets a little easier or slightly less terrifying... been looking for online work that did not seem like a total scam for almost a year now, and so far has not felt easier or less exhausting and have had no results yet....
Actually, in most cases, when you do it right and have at least even a modest email list (which Eat 24 surely does), you can event spend very little money.
Explaining the relation between the Fed's creation (or destruction) of bank reserves and banks» creation (or destruction) of deposits takes a little effort, not in the least because doing so means confronting the different ways in which economists on one hand and bankers and banking consultants on the other look at the process, and deciding whether the difference is due to substantive disagreement, or mere semantics.
Haven't got much to add apart from saying thanks as usual and that I'm secretly hoping rates do rise, just a little bit at least!
and a remuneration framework that, at least until the AUSTRAC action, had little sting for senior managers and above when poor risk or customer outcomes materialised and, until recently, provided incentives to staff that did not necessarily produce good customer outcomes.
Can you imagine being in a group that has a little more than 500 employees and has the following statistics: 29 have been accused of spousal abuse 7 have been arrested for fraud 19 have been accused of writing bad checks 117 have directly or indirectly bankrupted at least 2 businesses 3 have done time for assault 71 can not get a credit card due to bad credit 14 have been arrested on drug - related charges 8 have been arrested for shoplifting 21 are currently defendants in lawsuits 84 have been arrested for drunk driving in the last year
And, yes, doesn't Griffiths» Taylor sound at least a little like Griffiths?
Allowing for the remarkable contrasts, Ker believes he can still trace at least one theme through the work of all six of his subjects, a theme that has little to do with the obvious «motifs» of English Catholicism such as «aestheticism, a love of ritual, ceremony, tradition, the appeal of authority, a romantic triumphalism, the lure of the exotic and foreign, a preoccupation with sin and guilt.»
At least I didn't drown little babies in a Great Flood.
I came across the blog today doing research on a topic, and I must confess I found it at least a little amusing.
But frankly, all the pastors ought to be doing in the first place is being a servant and a slave to others — that's what a pastor is anyway, at least what sketchy little bits of «pastor» roles can be made out in the NT, as it's scarcely mentioned — not necessarily standing up there and teaching everyone two or three times a week, running the show, and acting like some kind of CEO.
Because there are others who believe the same way I do, and we have the best Bible scholars, and the best seminaries, and the biggest churches, and the most authors, and our missionaries are very active overseas, and we agree with most of the teachings of the church throughout history... at least since the Reformation anyway... and I believe that with time, and a little education of how to really study the Bible, people will eventually see that what I believe is the right way to believe.
That will be offensive to some people but, when I use it, the «effing» has very little to do with the act of intercourse, it's about emphasis, and (for me at least) there's no word in our limited lexicon that allows for the raw, heart - thumping emotion it conveys.
has about it something of a demand for a pedigree, which might at least lend some credibility to the claims Christ makes for himself; for want of which, Pilate can do little other than pronounce his truth: «I have power to crucify thee» (which, to be fair, would under most circumstances be an incontrovertible argument).
Now I do, at least a little bit more.
I suspect that if you took spousal and child abuse statistics in the US (and account at least a little bit for what goes unreported), you'd probably find that the spectrum of our «Christian» nation doesn't exactly have a lot to brag about either (but of course anyone who abuses children or spouse can't POSSIBLY be a «true Christian»... and I hope you see the irony in that remark).
The little that I can do is at least something — and something is better than nothing.»
If you do a little research, you'll also find that all Mile's wives were at least 18 or 19 when he married them so there goes that lie about marrying 11 year olds too.
For all are ordered together to one end, but it is as in a house, where the freemen are least at liberty to act at random, but all things or most things are already ordained for them, while the slaves and the animals do little for the common good, and for the most part live at random... (1075a16 - 23)
Clive, you point out how others often don't understand what Jesus was saying; but while Jesus often labors to try and make things clear to the unbeliever («Oh, you of little faith) or at the very least the author tries to make it clear for us in retrospect (At the time they didn't understand that he spoke of this...), in this case Jesus switches from something that might be figurative to essentially say «no, I seriously mean this» and it concludes not with Jesus saying «don't go away, this is what I actually mean» but confirming that people would refuse to accept that God intended for them to actually fill themselves with the life that He offered so they stopped following hiat the very least the author tries to make it clear for us in retrospect (At the time they didn't understand that he spoke of this...), in this case Jesus switches from something that might be figurative to essentially say «no, I seriously mean this» and it concludes not with Jesus saying «don't go away, this is what I actually mean» but confirming that people would refuse to accept that God intended for them to actually fill themselves with the life that He offered so they stopped following hiAt the time they didn't understand that he spoke of this...), in this case Jesus switches from something that might be figurative to essentially say «no, I seriously mean this» and it concludes not with Jesus saying «don't go away, this is what I actually mean» but confirming that people would refuse to accept that God intended for them to actually fill themselves with the life that He offered so they stopped following him.
That she leaves out the church is perhaps both an authorial oversight and an indication that churches have not shown enough concern about this issue — or, at least, have done too little to make their concern known.
I don't see any other way to determine that the religion you're practicing is the one that's right for you without knowing at least a little about the others.
Research studies have shown that many scientists are now trending towards believing in at least some form of divinity however; I think it's largely that we're only now letting science get the oppression it experienced over some of the religious wars fought over political reasons with little to do with actual beliefs or study.
He does not treat the parallel development in Marian devotion in which adult women and men were encouraged to relate to Mary as little children attached to their mother, relying on her to get them out of all trouble or at least comfort them in a motherly way.
I know of very few churches that don't have at least a little diversity in terms of age and economic class.
Jeremy and Glenn — I don't think that Brian would say he doesn't believe in absolute truth — I could be wrong but I think he would say something like... he doesn't believe that any human has (at least up to this point) been able to know absolute truth and that he believes there is a lot more of absolute truth to be known and that he doesn't believe that it is as narrow or «little» as so many try to make it.
So many questions, but we don't get to choose the word of the year (The runner - up is «nostalgia» which also seems just about as old as time itself, but at least it's entered sort of a boom season, so that makes a little more sense).
At least Robert had the courage to try — though his results of «I don't know, therefore it's true» are a little, uh, totally unsatisfactory.
I do so at least in word and deed, but I hold back a little bit of my heart, which might as well be all of it, because she can tell.
Because of that, I do not believe in theologians like Karl Barth saying, You do not have to worry about what the philosophers are saying — I think we had all better worry, at least a little, about what any careful, serious, sincere person says.
Still picking up a bit of a stalker vibe, but at least your little shadow approves of what you are doing.
They picked up the idea and continued it... SO in a way Santa lives on even today... So who is to say that Santa does not exist, when the spirit of Santa lives on in parents, and families and relatives, and friends... at least a little in all over the parents and familys, and friends, that exchange gifts on Christmas...
However, should there be at least two persons not guilty, the trade does seem to put little respect on human life and dignity, values we have come to appreciate, whether we are Christians Jews... or hopefully, muslims.
Most of us have done it at least once, you see the smallest spot of mold on the crust of a loaf of bread, and you figure that if you just cut that little part off then there'll be nothing to worry about.
Whenever wherewithal shapes the moral terrain and chooses the terms of compassion toward the «less fortunate,» we might at least have the good sense to be a little embarrassed — do what we think is best, but do it kneeling.
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