Sentences with phrase «in classic sense»

To be clear, there are agents at Keller Williams who aren't part of anything like a real estate team in the classic sense, but nonetheless, they're still part of the broader Keller team.
Define mindfulness in a classic sense and explain the meaning of mindfulness - informed interventions as a modern clinical term for addressing addiction.
Honesty with Auto Insurance Companies An auto insurance policy is a financial agreement in the classic sense, and a contract of sorts between two parties, the insured and read more...
[50] In C.N. Rail, supra, Henderson J. was dealing with rebuttal evidence in the classic sense described by Southin J.A. in Sterritt v. McLeod, supra, as simply evidence responsive to some point in the oral evidence of the witness called by the defendant.
But he's not an academic in the classic sense and it's not clear what the long - term relationship will be between the academics at Chase and the Lunsford Academy.
DiLorenzo is close to explaining the variability in the North Pacific, but he is treating the PDO in the classic sense and not simply as detrended SST anomalies of the North Pacific, so the importance of his findings may be overlooked.
Pumping more stuff into the atmosphere is an experiment we should avoid, even if CO2 is not a pollutant in the classic sense.
The crew that runs Human Resources is the only formalised collective in the classic sense, but the space always seems wholly open to the community.
The camera as Edward Weston states «provides the photographer with a means of looking deeply into the nature of things, and presenting his subjects in terms of their basic reality» Thus, in the classic sense, Tillmans» work unites photography's heroic modernism with the mysterious humanism of late twentieth century identity.
The confronting, intense constellation of pictures Tillmans has chosen for this exhibition have - in a classic sense of how artists used to work and galleries used to schedule - been drawn from his new work of the last year or so.
Picasso was a gifted artist who, as a child prodigy, mastered representation in the classic sense.
These chefs are all entrepreneurs in the classic sense.
The satisfaction of beating a level in Lexiv is rewarding in the classic sense as well as giving you the vague feeling that you learnt something.»
But Phantom Pain isn't really over until it has resolved the storyline of this bad - ass sniper and how she figures into the plot as a tragic hero in the classic sense of the word.
So it appears that Minnesota Life has retained its mutual company status in a roundabout way, although I don't think it is entirely accurate to make the statement that Minnesota Life is a mutual insurance company in the classic sense.
Man can, sometimes unfortunately, make his own order or disorder — but that's not entropy in the classic sense..
Part of being a gentleman in the classic sense is the ability to handle money well.
Add lucrative speaking and consulting gigs and what they had really done was make a major career shift from employment by corporations to self - employment: they had not «retired» in the classic sense of the lifestyle of someone who took a gold - plated pension at 70 to kick back and enjoy gardening, bridge and daytime TV.
I spent essentially my entire 20s in school, and I confess I didn't do much investing, at least in a classic sense, while I was in school mostly because I was either broke or worse than broke most of the time.
Hardcover: A book in the classic sense with a sturdy cover and spine, as it was already made at the time of Gutenberg.
Except for the silly graphics, it's a no - nonsense off - road machine in the classic sense of the word.
And even though the 911 Turbo is no muscle car in the classic sense, its twin - turbocharged flat - 6 powerplant can still pump out 450 bhp at 5700 rpm and 457 lb. - ft.
To be unveiled to the world at the 85th Salon International de l'Automobile in Geneva, the Kia SPORTSPACE is perhaps the ultimate «getaway» car — a thoroughly practical vehicle for everyday business use, yet a stylish and athletic grand tourer in the classic sense — ready to eat up the miles across continents, whether for business or leisure.
Here we use conservative in the classic sense of wanting to keep things exactly the way they've always been.
Not that I can't enjoy a stroll through the lower depths, but I now require that my guides (a) keep me entertained, in the classic sense, and (b) don't get all religious in the end.
Martin Scorsese's Silence is an epic in the classic sense of the word.
«I had an exquisite time chatting with a true gentleman, in the classic sense of the word, meaning he owns land and belongs to aristocracy.
Breaking Away, despite the accolades, is not a great movie in the classic sense, but it has more than enough charm and energy to earn it a place on the all - time favorites list of many who've seen it.
But what kicks it into a higher level is that it's a terrific vehicle for Jennifer Lawrence, one of the few movie stars who deserves one, who is a film star in the classic sense.
Hip in the classic sense, this low - hanging pendant features bold color on one side, initials on the other, and your loved one in...
[38] * Reishi (Ganoderma lucidum), shiitake (Lentinus edodes) and maitake (Grifola frondosa) mushrooms may not be adaptogens in the classic sense, but each has adaptogenic, antitumor and immune - potentiating properties.
It may not be mindful in the classic sense, but I don't believe that all mindful eating has to be.
They may not be adaptogens in the classic sense, but each has adaptogenic, anti-tumor and immune - enhancing properties.
«In the classic sense of evolution, the organisms with the beneficial mutations would have to pass these down to their offspring,» says Briggs.
that is no real expansion team, at least in classic sense — if I could cheery - pik like that, I could be the next GMGM!
Atlanta has been a superb baseball team since» 91, but not a dynasty, not in the classic sense, not with just one world championship.
I attempt to use organic techniques in the garden whenever possible, although I'm not a True Believer in the classic sense of the term.
A: The book isn't written to «artisans» and «creatives» in the classic sense.
As far as religion goes, miracles in the classic sense are indeed irrelevant.
Our conclusion is that miracles in the classic sense of specific divine intervention from outside do not have religious significance for us.
Nevertheless, faith healings are not miracles in the classic sense.
If everything and everyone is included in God, then there is no reason to fear condemnation in the classic sense of exclusion from God.
I know I'm not an academic or a theorist or a theologian in the classic sense.
[Ignorance here being defined in the classic sense — a lack of first hand knowledge of the topic in question.
And if Clara is taking on the skills and persona of the Doctor, he can look at her and say, no, she wasn't good in the classic sense of goodness but she is extraordinary — she survived, she saved as many as she could, she made hard decisions, she weighed the good of the many against the loss of a few.
The mainline establishment sees a Third World with churches everywhere as no longer a «mission field» in the classic sense.
In the classic sense, a blog features written content.
Jim Maloney, CEO at UFS, is an ardent advocate of the Prevue, which consists of an hour - long test in the classic sense: there are words to unscramble, math problems, mental rotation tasks.

Not exact matches

But a third entry in the Classic Edition family makes some sense.
The researchers believe that this dichotomy might be a classic case of the «licensing effect,» whereby people give themselves permission to behave badly after a noble move (or vice versa)-- in a sense, balancing out of their good and bad self - image.
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