Sentences with phrase «ever got at»

In celebration of the 39th anniversary of Star Wars» release, the Academy Film Archives shared a trailer to its Youtube page yesterday that was likely the first look audiences ever got at the third Star Wars film.
Wait, I take that back, I think it was the best deal I ever got at Anthro.
I tried and tried to make it work with the breast pump, but the most I ever got at a time was a couple of ounces.
Indeed, one of the most shocking statistics about child care in the United States is this: Only 1 in 6 children eligible for child care assistance ever get it at all.
Also, I knew that the ingredients were FAR BETTER than anything we'd ever get at a restaurant.
He got more balls more support than he ever get at Barcelona, where everyone play for Messi.
Congrats on getting an amazing deal:) The best deal I've ever gotten at Anthro is probably the Whooo Are You Dress (the one with little fairies printed all over it) and the Northern Crown Blouse for just $ 10 each.
Also Hannibal's only surviving victim has a plan up his sleeves if he can ever get at him.

Not exact matches

But a micro-manager won't delegate something unless the person is actually better than they are at the task — 120 % better — which means that nothing ever really gets delegated off your desk.
Many times, the parent company's tremendous buying power and special buying techniques can bring products, equipment and outside services to the licensee at a much lower cost than an independent could ever get.
But now the Midwest is getting into the mix, and it's swankier than ever before — at least in terms of average household income.
Right now, you can get one of Nest's Thermostat for as little as $ 139.99 at Best Buy; all you need to do is sign into your MyBestBuy account (the free account you've made if you have ever shopped on Best Buy's website before) to save.
Parents can get into a pattern of paying for their children's expenses without ever having a conversation about it, according to Aaron Thompson, a financial advisor at AGT Wealth Management in Annapolis, Maryland.
Ever wish you were better at getting people to do what you want?
«I had to wait for the first time ever to get a seat at a cafe in Tokyo recently.
That's a terrible thing in America, where a guy who has been a company commander in Afghanistan or Iraq goes to try and get a job at a tech company, some 25 - year - old HR weenie asks them if they've ever had a real job.
As I'm getting ready for the first - ever Innovation Congress in New York City this July (which, disclaimer, I happen to be co-producing) I thought I'd speak to some of the innovators speaking at the conference, to find out which podcasts inspire them the most, and why.
I have no doubt that we will continue to learn more and more together at an ever accelerating rate as we get more and more customers.»
«You can get wind in the sails for an early - stage idea much faster, and at lower cost, than ever before,» says Justin Hendrix, executive director of NYC Media Lab.
At the very least, it will produce better results for the US than Obama ever got from Moscow.»
Do you ever get tired at looking at the iPhone's same grid of apps, update after update?
That's powerful — and a long ways from throwing money at a print ad or plunking down thousands of dollars for a trade show booth and hoping that you get some new business out of it without ever really knowing if you did or didn't.
So, as the science on sitting gets more precise — and alarming — experts at more progressive companies are designing ever more potent responses.
Use «INSIDERPICKS» at checkout to make sure you're getting the lowest price available ever for Indochino.
They look at the big picture without ever considering the steps one would need to take to get from Point A to Point B.
To make sure no one ever gets a hold of Chick - fil - A's secret chicken sandwich recipe, the company has locked it up in a vault at its headquarters in Atlanta.
My mother would probably have been mortified to learn that I was doing this on Saturday afternoons — she probably figured I got my comics from the corner store — but I'll be damned if I didn't learn how to read cars and traffic lights at an early age, a skill that has paid dividends ever since I got behind the wheel.
Ever since Apple CEO Tim Cook confirmed that the company is working on «autonomous systems» for cars, details have trickled out as well as a few public sightings of the technology Now, thanks to the co-founder of self - driving car startup Voyage, we're getting an up close look at — and some expert insight on — Apple's Project Titan.
Here, she tells Inc. editor - at - large Kimberly Weisul the reason she's never taken on investors, why she tries to keep headcount down, and best advice she's ever gotten.
As Liz Ryan, founder and CEO of consulting firm The Human Workplace, writes in a post on LinkedIn, «How are you ever going to increase your earnings if every time you change jobs, you get a tiny raise over what they paid you at the last place?»
«Maybe on your way out you can take a look at Eli's rings, that's the closest you're ever gonna get to one.»
If you are an entrepreneur launching a business and want to get ahead of your competitors, have you and your team ever considered volunteering to help out at local schools?
While it's hard to know if the consumption tax could ever get mainstream traction, Johnson and Weld appeal to entrepreneurs because they seem to be a saner alternative to Trump, says Philip Wallach, a senior fellow in governance studies at Brookings Institution, a centrist think tank.
As Adams explains, «You don't ever want to need the money you've got in the stock market and have to go out and sell shares at a fire sale.»
At the same time, when multibillion - dollar startups can blow through hundreds of millions of investor dollars before imploding — or hire hundreds of employees and then close without ever launching a proper product — it gets harder and harder to believe that the tech sector isn't at least a little inflateAt the same time, when multibillion - dollar startups can blow through hundreds of millions of investor dollars before imploding — or hire hundreds of employees and then close without ever launching a proper product — it gets harder and harder to believe that the tech sector isn't at least a little inflateat least a little inflated.
On Thursday, April 27 at 2:00 p.m., ET, as the NFL gets ready for its big draft in Philadelphia, CNBC's «Power Lunch» will hold its biggest - ever stock draft.
If you have a retirement - savings plan at work, that plan is more likely than ever to automatically enroll you — and to automatically increase, over time, the percentage of your salary that gets saved.
2) Don't ever let emailed reports from doctors, particularly those from non-governmental organizations, get buried in inboxes at the WHO (or any public health authority).
Instead, you go crazy over any effort at all, and in no time flat, your baby is walking here and there — and soon, mostly there, and then, moving to a faraway place, and all you ever get are text messages.
Well, there's more content at buyers» fingertips than ever before, search engines are getting in touch with their human sides, and organic visibility on social media is effectively extinct.
There are a lot of moving and complex parts to Dell's $ 67 billion proposal to acquire the data storage company EMC — so many that analyst Maynard Um of Wells Fargo wonders if the deal will ever get closed at all.
If you've ever felt that being a stay - at - home parent or having off - ramped to care for your kids is hurting your chances of getting hired, you might be right.
At present, the evidence on that from market action is as borderline as it ever gets.
Just like we look back at a time before email, before the mainstream Internet, before Amazon, Google, Facebook, iPhones and the like, we'll wonder how we ever got along without these electronic mediums of exchange.
If you've ever been curious about what happens at Tony Robbins events, or just want to get a better understanding of the world - renowned life and business strategist, from how he prepares for 60 + hours on stage in front of thousands of people to what truly drives him to do what he does, this film is a must - see.
Especially any mom who has ever gotten up at 5AM to rush their kid to practice.
For example, if you were to get a loan today at 4.5 % (30 year mortgage), would you not have to wait a long time before you could get a savings account, CD or money market account that ever eclipsed that amount?
In yet another email exchange, Parrott notes that «all the investors will get this very quickly» in response to a message from Mary Goodman, a managing director at James Caird Asset Management (and a former Senior Advisor to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner who later served as Special Assistant to the President for Financial Markets at the National Economic Council), who stated that the Net Worth Sweep «should lay to rest permanently the idea that the outstanding privately held pref will ever get turned back on.»
But it got at an important question: How is a company that charges low prices and has high shipping costs ever going to make money?
If you're in your 20s or 30s there's a strong chance that you are getting puny paychecks that never seem to stretch far enough, and you may look at everything your baby boomer parents have and wonder if you'll ever catch up.
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