Sentences with phrase «early twenty somethings»

When I was younger (oh how much I miss being an early twenty something) weight would drop off in a second, and finding summer clothes was almost too easy... now the opposite couldn't be more true.

Not exact matches

It specifically fell for pre-teens, teenagers, and early twenty - somethings.
After seven years of working in the corporate world, one New York City - based twenty - something had a nest egg big enough to retire early.
In 1679, still in her early twenties, she made a perpetual vow of virginity, something highly unusual even among native American converts.
Charlotte is a twenty - something mum to Little Vin, early years childminder, playdough maker and believer in the power of playdates.
During the recent by - election at Nantwich and Crewe which the Conservatives gained by overturning a huge Labour majority, various comments were heard from teenage voters and early twenty - somethings such as: «If Tories win does it mean a change of Prime Minister?»
Exemplified in a new charity «Young Dementia UK, who report that many of their clients are in their late 40's and early 50's - something unthinkable twenty years ago»
Of course, back in the early 1980s the idea of finding a partner via the Internet would have been regarded in the same light as taking a day trip to the moon; twenty plus years on and strolling around Copernicus for the afternoon is still the stuff of fantasy, but finding the perfect match on the Internet is something that more and more of us are doing.Out there in the online jungle are a great many different creatures, all of whom make their respective ways down...
The Hollywood press corps began touting Cruise as one of the «Brat Pack,» a group of twenty - something actors who seemed on the verge of taking over the movie industry in the early»80s.
«The ILX is for those of us who grew up loving Honda Civics of the»90s to early 2000s,» said twenty - something videographer Sandon Voelker.
In her early twenties she challenged herself to do something «outrageous» every week and, while not doing anything particularly daring, did push the borders of what she could do and how brave she could be.
But they argue that we must also diversify across time, something almost no one does: «Even after accounting for inflation, a typical investor has twenty or even fifty times more invested in stocks in his early sixties than he had invested in his late twenties... It's as if your twenties and thirties didn't really exist.»
I'm part of the generation your parents complain about, one of those twenty - somethings who was raised on the Internet and taught from an early age that paying attention to one thing at a time is way boring.
The then early - twenty - something Alex Glauber was a part of this global art team, acting as an assistant curator.
Twenty - three years older than my uncle, Morris became something of a mentor to him, encouraging him in his studies and earliest professional opportunities.
It's almost like we — the twenty - and early thirty - somethings — are coming of age at some weird potluck of every social issue staring us in the face: food insecurity, epic natural disasters, stock market crashes, three wars, droughts worse than the Dust Bowl, banks getting away with robbery, extreme poverty, corporate - purchased elections, rising childhood obesity, rising deficit, salmon run extinctions, flocks of birds dropping out of the sky, college debt surpassing credit card debt, you name it.
Devon Dyer may only be in her early twenties, but this girl is as pulled together as any experienced thirty - something.
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