Sentences with phrase «for flinching»

We all want to get the best bang for our buck, but when confronted with the complex reams of numbers that seemingly adorn every processor and every graphics card the uninitiated can hardly be blamed for flinching, especially since one needs to ensure parts are compatible with each other before buying.
You shouldn't feel so daft for flinching this time.
Bleed for This flinches from plunging into the madness, the place where a truly interesting movie resides.

Not exact matches

But give him credit for never flinching.
He never flinched in his passion for Uber to dominate its markets.
Porat, known inside Alphabet for her fierce attention to controlling costs, doesn't flinch in her defense of the company's touchy - feely legacy.
Although the «flinch test» (keep raising the price and constraining the terms until the customer flinches) may have been an effective pricing art in the era of enterprise software, much more thoughtful strategies are needed for the modern models.
Just for fun... a reader may have wondered about those three (3) categories above, and flinched at one or the other.
Even people of other religions don't flinch in the slightest when I say «communion reminds me that God became human as Jesus, walked among us, and died for us on a cross» and that «we are followers of Jesus.»
Instead, if he does not flinch from it, but rather continues to love, his capacity for love increases, and his suffering can be accompanied by a deeper peace and joy.
You bemoan the «atrocities» attributed to Allah, but you do n`t even flinch when hearing about how God / Jehovah slaughtered all the babies of Egypt in «Exodus» and ordered the elimination of entire ethnic groups in «Joshua» including women, children, and trees or the 3,000 Israelites killed by Moses for worshipping the golden calf (or the dozen or so other slaughters condoned by the bible).
Your cancer walks into the room before you do and people who know better still flinch — as they did before lepers, who were made to live outside the community, who had to beg for survival.
Even though the voice's enthusiasm for the world of higher motion seems to have suspended my own doubts, it is disturbing to think how easily a skeptical oyster could argue from all this that ballerinas do not exist, but rather are nothing more than a distracting hypothesis invented by oysters who can not face the grimness of existence without flinching.
You bemoan the «atrocities» attributed to Allah, but you do n`t even flinch when hearing about how God / Jehovah slaughtered all the babies of Egypt in «Exodus» and ordered the elimination of entire ethnic groups in «Joshua» including women, children, and trees or the 3,000 Israelites killed by Moses for worshipping the golden calf (or the dozen or so other slaughters condoned by the Bible).
Updike does not flinch at making God responsible for the deaths that undermine our confidence in the goodness of life.
I flinch at stories of people killed when tornadoes are tearing off the church roof or hurricanes are flooding their houses — even as they pray for Jesus to rebuke once more the wind and the waves.
Fans hoping for fireworks in that meet (a Tyson Gay — Usain Bolt showdown, for example) know they're one flinch away from disappointment.
Its natural instinct to flinch I get that, but at 6» 7 with that grimace on his face and the way he ducked looked like he had never played football before never mind supposedly won 100 caps for germany
1st, Real Madrid u may come up with at least 100m before we even flinch at an offer for Alexis... pay the man 160,000 a wk Arsene!
However, the Bulldogs were called for an offside, despite several Alabama players appearing to flinch right before the snap, which could've been a false start.
Apparently, Spurs fans saw the funny side of the incident, trolling Mark Noble for not even being able to flinch Sissoko despite leaning on him with all of his body weight.
However, for more peace of mind, you can make sure that the ones that are foldable have tough locks on them that do not flinch no matter what happens.
We'll spare the gentle reader's sensibilities by taking this any further, but others have not flinched from the matter at hand — thanks to a certain «counterculture icon» for pointing out the fine title of that last YouTube clip.
-LSB-...] left - wing bloggers begin to push the line that the Cameroon's are planning a coup (e.g. Sunder Katwala, Though Cowards Flinch); then Manish Sood, the Labour candidate for Norfolk north - west calls his -LSB-...]
The Democrats didn't flinch, for once, so Republicans couldn't lose more than a vote or two in the Senate, which they promptly did when the CBO produced a disastrous score for the bill.
Messrs Huhne, Cable and Clegg may have been respectively difficult for their partners over AV, Beecroft and nearly everything, but they can not be accused of flinching from George Osborne's Plan A. Mr Huhne was a convinced supporter of deficit reduction even before the election.
He called for Labour to take its «inspiration» from them, and not to «flinch», just like they didn't flinch.
It has a tough outer shell made for commercial - duty applications and is designed to handle drops up to one meter (3.3») without flinching!
He didn't flinch from controversy, presenting evidence for human influence on global temperature and debunking common «natural causes» myths.
But that judge at the SACNAS (or Society for Advancement of Chicanos / Hispanics and Native Americans in Science) conference didn't flinch when I told her about my status.
We are thankful for our families who don't flinch when we say that we need to go into the lab at midnight, even though the gist of this sentiment is that we're choosing bacterial cultures over them.
They don't flinch at the idea that we will not shower for weeks or that we are 20 people crammed into three vehicles for days until we reach the Gobi Desert.
For example, she discovers that Wantage can not learn to stop flinching when tapped on the bridge of the nose.
She hid for most of the the first week and flinched whenever I would reach out to pet her.
The fit, style, pattern, and material is really high - end for an Old Navy dress and the price is nothing to flinch at either!
He is expected to be financially stable, not flinching before fishing out some bucks for this activity.
Haneke's camera is scrupulously avoidant of anything remotely approaching exploitation or cruelty, but it doesn't flinch for a moment from the harsh physical and emotional realities of the dreadful situation, its confusion and loss and humiliation; that kind of unremitting honesty, however — that kind of acknowledgment of the painful, irremediable fact of death — makes for the most stirring, principled, and meaningful illustration possible of the truest meaning of love, the kind that goes much deeper and wider, and endures longer, than romance or joy or even togetherness.
Released: September 15 Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Javier Bardem, Ed Harris, Michelle Pfeiffer Director: Darren Aronofsky (Black Swan) Why it's great: Relentless, morbid, and empowered like an Adderall - fueled, all - night Philosophy final prep session, Aronofsky's chamber piece is not for the weak of heart (or anyone who flinches at the sight of a weak human heart, for that matter).
As a paw is spit - roasted, the point is well made: faced with extreme material for his first adaptation, biggest budget and biggest cast (not his only hapless hound, mind — RIP, Sightseers» Poppy), Wheatley doesn't flinch.
In scenes such as this, the story doesn't shy away from graphic displays of blood so audiences should be prepared to flinch for a few seconds before they laugh at the pure insanity of it all.
Luckily McCall's past is something that prepared him for situations exactly like this, and so despite facing such a daunting combatant he never flinches.
But before you flinch, drop that attitude: Several of these blockbusters have been excellent action movies, redeeming Hollywood's most profitable genre as opportunities for sophistication, sarcasm and panache.
While Jeremy Renner (not seen in this sequence) is the obvious front man for the movie, giving a performance that is impossible to look away from, Ackroyd is the unsung hero, because his camera never flinches, and only rarely exaggerates.
Unlike the youngest son of Storytelling's best segment, who absorbs his parent's bourgeoisie disdain for their El Salvadoran immigrant maid, Remi sort of flinches and passively contracts at his mother's nastiness.
I know this means we should stay away — and I've been flinching over the film's annoying posters in the NYC subway for months (the AV Club calls it among «the worst movie advertising campaigns of all time»)-- but sometimes, when a movie gets piled on like this, I'm almost curious enough to want to go to see why.
While the film does not flinch from the consequences of Republican Army killings (or shootings by the British army, for that matter), it also exposes the hypocrisy of a government which insisted publicly that Republicans were criminal rather than political prisoners, while at the same time treating them with a barbarity that no criminal would ever face.
He's a man who is not easily perturbed and doesn't even flinch at the situation he and group of psychos find themselves in — which makes the entire situation more dire for Yelchin, Shawkat, and co..
Wahlberg, stern and focused throughout, never flinches at the mounting danger as he hurtles through the smoky hallways in an effort to save as many people as possible — although he's mostly focused on saving terrified rig worker Andrea Fleyta (Gina Rodriguez, eyes bulging on cue), whose sole purpose is to give Wahlberg's character the opportunity for a selfless act.
Eva flinches, expecting a blow or an insult, and can hardly believe that anyone, let alone one of the victims, could feel compassion for her.
«We say this is the no - flinch moment for school personnel.
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