Not exact matches
The recently released minutes to the Fed's September meeting
showed the committee
fretting about the sharp drop stocks had suffered
over the past month.
College interviews are scary enough without
fretting over wardrobe issues too - and tales of «campus interview fashion
shows», especially ones held at Ralph Lauren stores, don't help!
In much the same spirit
over at the FT Philip Stevens
frets that David Cameron mustn't
show too much zeal for downsizing the state, and the Indy's Steve Richards laments the end of Tory «pragmatism.»
(Don't
fret if some of the prices
show up higher when you hover
over the slideshow.
Max holds an open house to
show off his completed remodel; Tara and Charmaine ask their mother about Tara's childhood memories; Marshall goes cruising with Lionel; Kate's new man
frets over their age difference.
Every Oscar season us awards watchers generally find ourselves in two camps; getting bored or frustrated when everything seems inevitable and freaking out when there are open races just days before the big
show and
fretting over our predictions.
Such issues are still relevant, but contemporary artists
fret about other things, too, as seen in more than 50 museum exhibits, gallery
shows and events that will unfold
over the next seven weeks in the Twin Cities, Duluth, Rochester and Northfield.
It's a risky move for Obama given how Solyndra tarnished his energy brand with a series of embarrassing emails
showing aides
fretting over the political implications of the company's bankruptcy, as well as images of the FBI raiding its corporate headquarters.
If you cringed as you read the sentences at the top of this story, don't
fret — researchers have
shown that adult attachment is fluid
over time, and even those with the most entrenched challenges can gradually «earn» secure attachment.
>> Tina Fey
fretted on the David Letterman
show that her toddler Penelope is a sociopath: «I was giving her a bath one night, and she was overtired — in her defense — and I said, «OK, bath time
over.»