A good analogy here is American Football.
A good analogy here is how Google came to create the General Transit Feed Specification (formerly Google Transit Feed Specification) so that they could include timings for buses and trains in Google Maps.
A really
good analogy here would be alcohol.
Yet even if the Siberian craters do prove to be an unexpected mechanism of accelerated methane release,
the best analogy here remains «boiling a frog» as impacts accumulate gradually, until eventually a tipping point is reached.
Not exact matches
As we pointed out in chapter I, above, it is
here that the modern attempt to reconstruct his teaching has been most successful and, today, the
best - known feature of that teaching is its incomparable use of simile and
analogy.
An
analogy:
Here in the Southwest, temperatures soar
well over 100 F for weeks.
An
analogy:
here in the Southwest, the temperature will soar
well above 100 for weeks on end.
The iron - in - furnace
analogy fits
well here.
Here we can
best understand Whitehead's point by
analogy with works of the imagination, since this fourth way calls upon the resources of conceptual possibility to heal the wounds inflicted by actuality.
The
analogy that
best describes our company is the fact that everyone
here pulls on the same end of the rope.»
That
analogy is even
better if you know that both Sullivan and Roth were arrested in Central Park for buying drugs, but I'm not
here to betray Jeff's confidence.
Here's a
better analogy: It's like when one's guests eat up all the food at the kiddush (baby empties the breast and continues to suckle)-- next time you know to make more.
The problem with that
analogy is that Michigan held an open primary and New York's is closed; Mr. Sanders does
best with the independents who will be shut out of the primary
here.
The
best analogy that we can give you
here is that the thinner the fascia, the easier it is for the muscles to blow up like a balloon.
To give you a
better idea of what this fascia / connective tissue looks like, I like to use my «worn out workout tights»
analogy and you can see more (pardon, the pun)
here.
I think your last response is certainly
better than your first, as the ballroom dancing
analogy (as most readers
here will interpret) was very poorly constructed.
The tortoise and hare
analogy fits
well here - where the tortoise (asset allocation) is slow and boring, but eventually wins over the exciting fits and starts of the hare (market timing and / or stock and ETF trading).
Here's a
good analogy: Imagine you hire a tax accountant who charges $ 1,000 and he saves you $ 2,000 in taxes.
I would follow your line of reasoning
here if it were applied to both sides of the argument — but repeatedly you and the tribe are frothing, ranting, raving, and making ridiculous
analogies (to Eugenics, tulip frenzies and now even Hitler) with the
best of them yet the hunters of the world refuse to recognize this (or it might be too great a stretch of intellect).
As to your response on chemistry and spectroscopy over at WUWT (no idea what happened to your comment
here, it must have been a browser problem, it's not in the comments database
here at all)- you cite «valence bond theory, -LSB-...] molecular orbital theory, -LSB-...] crystal field theory, ligand field theory, self - consistent field and X-alpha method» - none of those are based on fundamental physics, they are all phenomenological theories that work quite
well for chemists, but they are not directly derived from underlying physical theory except through very rough approximations and
analogies.
By the way, there is sort of an
analogy here to the stock market: It is often noted by the sort of people who write mutual fund reports that if you just missed a few short periods of time in the market over the last few decades (e.g., say, the N
best weeks where N is a fairly small number), you would have missed out on nearly all of the stock market gains.
Also, there is no crime, so maybe the boy crying wolf is a
better analogy for what goes on
here.
A
better analogy than dice: The comment about dice being non-chaotic is a
good one, so
here's a
better analogy for you.
Elizabeth Layne, Appear
Here's CMO, gave a great
analogy stating «the
best landlords think like Editors.