Sentences with phrase «even opining»

Current and former football players speak out regularly on the subject, even opining on whether their children will be playing the sport.
Some observers even opined that it appeared to be fighting to preserve its relevance when it opposed the national champion arguments put by Murray Goulburn.
Andrew Carleton got strep throat and missed the game so nobody can even opine about him not playing.
I have even opined on 10 + financial accounting standards over time.
The Verge even opined that with the four ESS digital - to - analog converters, the V20 will be the perfect companion of audiophiles who like to listen to high quality sound using headphones.

Not exact matches

Talking of all this in the Frank + Oak boardroom, Song shifts into guru mode, opining about a future that seems (to him) crystal clear, even if — always working to be a step ahead — he won't share exactly what he sees.
Japan watchers have made a perennial sport out of opining on the causes of Japan's low marriage and birth rates, even though they're common to most advanced economies.
But through all of this I'm always reminded that in tough times some people pull up their socks and help get the job done while others turn to being critics: Even some who don't actually take risks or accomplish things love to opine.
At the end of the day, I'd probably opine that even the most conservative of DG «ers should try to maintain at least 5 % of a stock portfolio in some sort of tech stock configuration.
Even the neoliberal Economist magazine opined just last year that an increase in the US minimum would probably have little or no effect on employment.
On October 21, 1978, five days after the election of Cardinal Karol Wojtyla as Pope John Paul II, the «liberal» Polish Communist journal Polityka opined that, since World War II, Poland had been «a special example of a creative and fruitful coexistence between nonbelievers and Catholics»» which seems, in retrospect, an almost unimaginably self - delusional judgment, even by Communist standards.
He opined that even the great Cech would have conceded the goals that Ospina conceded, insisting that our defensive problems are beyond our goal keepers.
August, for the PGA Championship, was a more realistic target date for Tiger than the Open Championship in July, opined Parekh, who suggested that even then may be too soon for Tiger to get back into the fray.
The state ethics commission opined that it would even be legal for another Brown Rudnick partner Tom Ritter (another former Speaker!)
His Democratic rival Sal Albanese was the only candidate to even obliquely refer to the new sexting details when he opined in his opening remarks, «It's unfortunate we've had this distraction, the latest psychodrama with Weiner.»
Even Harvard molecular geneticist George Church got into the act, opining that DIYbio hobbyists should be licensed, much like amateur pilots, fishing enthusiasts, or shortwave radio operators.
An even more hopeful Polly opines, «I think that this could not be just a page being turned; this could be a whole new book.»
Physicist Athene Donald of the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom opined in The Guardian: «It is not encouraging for young female scientists to see that parliament apparently cares so little about their futures that they couldn't even come up with even that long - derided sole token woman.»
In a rabid display of partisan non-objectivity, they opine that all supplements are a worthless, or even harmful; and furthermore, that we should abandon research on supplement efficacy as a waste of money — «Case closed,» they prematurely declare.
The mood of grim portent reigns throughout, even during a supposedly joyful — if absurd — diversion of a Weasley wedding, about which Harry opines, «I don't care about a wedding,» and frankly neither do we.
It was, he opined, what all acting is about, even with such a serious role as Abel Morales in Chandor's brilliant examination of ethics and corruption and the will to survive.
Heck, even the characters know it's gravy — the only character to acknowledge that Scott is killing the exes is Envy Adams, who opines in Volume 3 «You just headbutted my best friend so hard he burst, Scott.»
Though Michael Fassbender contributes a potential Oscar - winning performance (one critic opines that the Academy should not even bother voting: just mail him the Oscar), the fragmentation is disturbing and would grate on segments of the audience who like their bio-pics complete without being broken up into simply melodramatic moments.
And that's not even counting education's TFA / Black Lives Matters superstars, Deray Mckesson and Brittany Packnett, who opine mostly about politics these days and thus are on my «other educators to follow» list below.
Even when Mitchell knew vastly more than I did about a question — which was most of the time — he didn't want to opine, but to see what else he might learn.
The standards also specify that students — even those in the youngest grades — should cite evidence from readings as they write, and not just invent stories or opine based on prior knowledge.
The Justices of the Delaware Supreme Court opined in an advisory opinion that a bill for transporting private school students at public expense would violate the Delaware Constitution because even incidental aid violates the language of the state's Blaine Amendment.
When it comes to opining on seniors carrying debt into retirement, I'll state upfront my personal bias that anyone with credit - card debt — or even mortgage debt — has no business fantasizing about retirement.
In 2010, an IRS counsel opined that even though a Canadian mutual fund may be a trust under Canadian law, it is a corporation under U.S. law.
Although museum retrospectives of his work always draw huge crowds, it did not stop a Village Voice art critic from opining that Wyeth's paintings are «formulaic stuff, not very effective even as illustrational realism.»
Having opined on Richard Tol elsewhere, quite rudely even for me, I will leave it to any interested parties to take a look.
IMO, your «opining» about those issues should not be limited by virtue of you being a scientist — even though by virtue of your scientific credentials, many people give your opinions on those issues a lot of weight.
I'm not a legal expert, but I think that anyone not selling a product or service can not be punished for fraud, so the vast majority of people opining on climate are not even theoretically threatened by such a case.
I'm just saying that reading the post and even the Mann paper is not sufficient to opine on the issue here.
There were even a few who actually opined that the past cold winters across the northern hemisphere were caused by AGW!
If I take the liberty of moving your apostrophe so it reads «convinced of the evidence that emission policies are required», which I think is your sense, then it dangerously elides having «cred and exp» in climate science with having «cred and ex» in opining, even advising, on policy response.
For example, climate scientists are least well - placed to make a judgement on the timing and quantum of CO2 emissions that are exported from, say, Spain, as a result of higher electricity prices there resulting from wind and solar, and certainly very poorly placed to opine on the impact on global GHG emissions of cap - and - trade or any similar EU or even EU / USA - wide policy.
I opine it ought to do better than the usual EVT approaches using just the extreme events or even the (generalized) Pareto distribution which perforce uses just the rare events as well, but more of those.
I'd opine further that the result generally is that someone makes themself idiotic *, as when our friend Victor painted himself into a position where he was unable to acknowledge, or perhaps even to see, that a «lack» of air conditioning can indeed be determinative of a warmer room under some circumstances.
We haven't succeeded even at conserving for the current generation as little as the level of health of the previous one; demographers opine that people born today have a life expectancy shorter than our own.
At least one authoritative treatise on the subject of legal malpractice has opined that ``... there is little consensus on, or even discussion of its meaning.»
Some commenters argue that the length of the patent vetting process has created so much frustration that some inventors aren't even bothering to file while others opine that companies are cutting IP budgets due to the economy, so they aren't filing as much.
A commenter on the Slaw.com post opined that using Google means more security, not less, writing that «Google is essentially a very, super large firm with a lot more resources to dedicate to security etc. whereas a law firm, even a large one, will at best have a small IT staff that operate a dedicated server for the firm.»
Even perennial law firm value - hunter Mike Dillon, Sun Microsystems» GC, opines in the article that: «$ 1,000 for very seasoned lawyers who can solve complex problems doesn't seem to be inappropriate.»
Ryan also opines that, even in today's market, arrogance and entitlement on the part of law students seem to live on.
These theory opines that property owners owe varying degrees of duty to protect lawful visitors (and sometimes even lawful visitors) from unreasonable risk of harm.
However, even in these reports, the reporter can opine on whether the child had been trained to say what he / she said or whether his / her wishes were genuine and not based on parental influence.
Tom Goldstein of SCOTUS Blog also opines that Grutter survives — and indeed, even thrives — in the aftermath of today's decision.
Commenters at WSJ Blog have mixed views, though a majority opined that law has never been highly regarded profession even since Shakespearean times.
Dr. Frank has opined that «her persistence in schooling even though she was significantly disabled has been impressive».
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