Sentences with phrase «former days sometimes»

Zealous evangelicals who retain the anti-Catholic instincts of former days sometimes think that when their fellow Protestants begin to take an interest in the Catholic Church or to make sympathetic noises about Catholic beliefs, practices, and institutions, the moth has begun to circle the flame.

Not exact matches

When I meet former students, long after their student days are over, I sometimes get the impression that they remember nothing I ever told them except my jokes and stories.
proof i've become the stereotypical eugene - ian: now wearing socks that don't go with anything, with everything, sometimes go days without brushing my hair and skip showers, have basically turned the front and backyards into an «urban» farm, and... there is nothing quite like a post-run refill of broccoli sprouts and the bucha, the former of which i take with me on weekend getaways.
Day sometimes visits former teammates and coaches in Fayetteville and occasionally helps train Malik.
But as a former high school English teacher and now a certified K - 12 Reading Specialist, I know there are really easy ways of preparing my kiddos for school — or enhancing their learning at school — that sometimes takes all of five minutes of our day.
Kramer noted that former mayors Michael Bloomberg, Rudolph Giuliani and David Dinkins each took on - camera questions three to four times a week, and former Mayor Ed Koch sometimes had three to four news conferences a day.
The former teacher, Kenneth Williams, also reported to school district authorities that the school's staff sometimes used personal vehicles to drive students to school on days when the state was counting attendance to increase enrollment numbers, and therefore, payments from the district.
The Winnie Estelle is a former freighter (or «island trader») now doing day trips and some charters The Winnie Estelle, an island trader motor sailer based in San Pedro, sometimes does charters along the Belize coast.
Only a couple of days ago the CBC's Ontario Today did a segment entitled «so you think you are covered» and their lines instantly lit up with (former and current) accident victims calling in to complain about the years and years of denial and delay they endured — sometimes over a decade — as there cases dragged on and they were worn down by the «inherently expensive» vagary of medico - legal expert assessment treadmill which drive personal injury litigation.
NEW: George Washington University law professor (and former prosecutor) Randall Eliason's posts delve into the big white - collar crime cases of the day, sometimes exploring the lawyers» tactics.
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