Sentences with phrase «imagine doing most»

I can't imagine doing most of those things with a piece of rectangular plastic; I feel it has no character.
In my work and career though, I aspire to something more than a middle of the road performance, as I imagine do most of you, so the lesson here comes not from my own experience of running, but from watching champions competing in the Olympics or world marathon majors.

Not exact matches

«This book helped me understand that doing your best work and being your most focused takes practice and training — and not necessarily the kind of practice you might imagine.
I imagine most executives could say the same, but if you don't take the time to recognize those things, you risk your team taking them for granted... creating the monster of ingratitude.
Whereas I imagine most of my peers clicked through their six - question survey like a fire - and - forget missile, I kicked things up a notch, making a simple spreadsheet to log my results, and committing to doing the same simple exercise, year in and year out, for the rest of my career.
The most powerful diesel engine in the world is designed by a Finnish company, Wärtsilä, and it can do more than you can imagine.
But if you want to build a fast - growing, tech - enabled startup it's hard to imagine doing so without venture capital, and lambasting VCs publicly probably isn't the most thoughtful strategy.
Should it somehow pass muster with the Senate (which, in the bill's current form, I can not imagine), it might end up doing what Republicans seem to fear most: enshrining a citizen right to basic health care.
Of course you can imagine one of the world's most storied billionaires listening to Bocelli, which Musk likely does while enjoying fine Scotch and buffing his collection of futuristic concept cars with only the finest cashmere scarves.
Smartphones didn't exist all that long ago, but today most of us can't imagine not having one with us at all times.
Imagine making the most important investment of your lifetime without doing any research.
I have to imagine even the most conservative of CEOs would do a two - step in celebration.
While HR may not get the glory that, say, Finance does, it's hard to imagine a function more essential to most business.
Most of these risks do not come to pass, and if they do eventuate they don't necessarily unfold as we had imagined they might.
Interesting topic... I struggle with this idea because like most people that I imagine read your blog, I earned the money... creating a legacy of family who does not have to provide for themselves goes against my core beliefs.
(Ben Carlson) «Corrections come a lot slower than anyone expects, but once they happen they escalate faster than most could imagine» (Ivanhoff) «Indices have a tendency to come back, stocks are a different story, most don't make it.»
Loyola keeping a Catholic identity helps promote real intellectual diversity in American public life (and, again, I'd say the same as to other religious universities; I can imagine some religious belief systems that are so pernicious that, while they must be constitutionally protected, we can still say they hurt American life more than they help it, but I think that most of the traditions that found universities do have a good deal to contribute).
It doesn't do much for me, or for most people I imagine.
As you might imagine, crypto practitioners and experts don't all agree on regulation, but most agree that it is a problem.
Few people will imagine buying Necker Island on a whim in their twenties like the Virgin boss did, but most of us can picture buying a van or investing in property.
At this time no one knows with any certainty as to how abiogenesis happened, but you may feel it was god, but I would imagine that at some time in the future science will have a working hypothesis.it most likely does already I am am not sure.
Though most of us can readily imagine that we're owed an apology for something (and perhaps lots of somethings), admitting that we've done anything that requires forgiveness comes less easily.
I would imagine that «correct doctrine» has done more damage in the world than most anything else.
If Christianity be rightly understood and if Christians understand themselves correctly, things are exactly the opposite of what most Christians and non-Christians imagine: hope in the absolute future of God who is himself the eschatological salvation does not justify a fossilized conservatism which anxiously prefers the safe present to an unknown future; it is not a tranquillizing «opium for the people» in present sorrow; it is, on the contrary, the authoritative call to an ever - renewed, confident exodus from the present into the future, even in this world.
For philistinism thinks it is in control of possibility, it thinks that when it has decoyed this prodigious elasticity into the field of probability or into the mad - house it holds it a prisoner; it carries possibility around like a prisoner in the cage of the probable, shows it off, imagines itself to be the master, does not take note that precisely thereby it has taken itself captive to be the slave of spiritlessness and to be the most pitiful of all things.
Most human beings, when confronted directly with the question, will typically acknowledge that there is in fact a fundamental distinction between what one imagines and what is real, and admit that something that one imagines does not actually exist.
Under those imagined conditions, most pregame rule - makers would rationally, and justly, choose a reward schedule that would protect them if they did poorly in the lottery.
As for hate, any being who torture forever and ever those he doesn't like may as well be the most hateful being ever imagined.
Considering his condition is likely what allowed him to spend most of his time thinking and doing physics, thus making him one of the world's most well respected physicists and living far longer with ALS than any other individual before him, and is still able to communicate, I would imagine Maire is correct and he is an atheist not because he is all that bitter, but because the further people tend to go in science, the less they tend to believe in religion.
In a fascinating parallel with Thomas Aquinas» view of the matter, Novak shows that the covenant does not abolish nature but builds on it: Where natural justice was the most that other nations in the ancient Near East could imagine, justice was for Israel the bare minimum the covenant guaranteed.
Most priest and nuns that I've met (and I'm still Catholic, so I imagine I know more than a former Catholic) are in it because of sincere willingness to do God's work, not any material rewards.
He is so engrossed in the story that He is constantly trying to convince us, the cast of characters, to follow the happiest, most successful path we could imagine (and no that does not mean «go to church, pray, submit yourself to a monkish lifestyle»).
Internal contradictions aside, most Christians I know or know of don't imagine god as material or subject to representative art.
This woman did more for the poor people than most famous people can ever imagine.
OLFRANK: is that why minarates are being banned in most of Europe??? So you want to protect your faith and its symbols but don't mind other symbols being banned??? In actuality its even worse, a minarate is not a symbol that is hung in a class room but its actually part of a mosque, so imagine a whole continent (Europe) saying no more bells attached to any churches!!!
I can't imagine any church here where that would happen, but then we don't have a Bible Belt and we shipped most of our religious nutters to America, thank goodness.
The vast majority, I imagine, are really nonbelievers (see my post, «Most Christians don't Believe ``.
As I try to dream and imagine what kind of «church» model best fits my personality and the cultural and historical context in which I find myself, I have slowly yet systematically stripped away everything I know and believe about how church has been traditionally done, and even how it is being done in the most innovative and progressive churches of our day.
I can only imagine what it does to a quick bread — yummm... This bread looks incredibly moist and most inviting.
Most people imagine 2 cups of orange juice in the morning is «healthy» but is probably one of the worst things you can do to yourself every morning.
We surprised all our family and friends with a simple little ceremony at our farewell party and it was the most perfect way I could ever imagine doing it.
2 x 284 ml pots of buttermilk 420g wholemeal flour — I use the strong wholemeal flour designed for bread making 4 tablespoons sunflower seeds 2 tablespoons sesame seeds 2 tablespoons linseed 150g oats — I use rolled oats 1 teaspoon muscovado sugar — I use this kind but imagine most sugars will do the trick 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
Every sport book today is computerized, Back in my day money always moved the line if a player was respected, and if the squares tossed enough money on a game most books would move the line a little, However the big books would just sit and even take layoffs from the small stores, They knew even if the squares got hot in the end the juice would eat em up.Gone are the days when Billy Walters and his crew would move the line 3 and 4 points, I'm talking sides not totals, Forget about what they did to the horseshoe with totals in the NBA, Back then you could catch small non computerized stores with bad lines to begin with, imagine a three point move and the small store or corner bookie is off on the line a few points to begin with, I could catch some game with 6 and seven point advantages, with computers today if you can catch a half or one point advantage your lucky.Even if you know the group moving the line most of these store move the lines on air, when I say air they just watch the screen from D.B. And move the line before they even get hit, Hell even the big stores have the sharps on small limits per call.
If you hadn't heard the name before yesterday, then do not worry, neither had I, nor had most I'd imagine.
As i imagine most of people that clicked did.
It's easy to imagine the 28 - year - old could shine for most other top clubs, and if he does move for just # 30m many suitors will surely see that as a potential bargain.
My point is that there is much more to NYC basketball than the Knicks and I imagine that most NYers would agree that the Knicks are the weak link in the NYC basketball environment (but only because they either forgot about the Nets or don't really consider them part of NYC).
Don't you imagine there is a reason most teams end up scrapping the 3 defender system after they try it.
As much as news might not have hit the airwaves due to the precision with which the transfers were executed, just imagine how many top clubs would want to have the two (and please don't give me the «present form» argument, most managers are smarter than that) from two seasons ago.
wants to join us as I would imagine that Arsenal is a club that most players dream of playing for, more than even the likes of Bayern or Barcelona, because under Wenger players do not have to worry about their performances.
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