Just hear me out... we love pecan pie and we love bacon.
Before you think I'm crazy,
just hear me out.
I know it sounds crazy, but
just hear me out.
Now, this is going to sound silly but
just hear me out.
You are probably wondering why I am such a fan of the conveniences that umbrella strollers offer, so
just hear me out.
but
just hear me out for a minute.
Before you think you can't do
it just hear me out and give it a try.
«If you can
just hear me out, I want to talk to you about what went into [my decision],» Peralta told the standing - room - only crowd at the Jackson Heights Jewish Center on 77th Street Friday night — where more than 100 people who couldn't get inside turned the street into an impromptu protest zone.
Now, before you think this is a crazy idea that would never work in your office environment,
just hear me out.
Before you think you can't do
it just hear me out and give it a try.
Just hear us out: Silky jumpsuits are everywhere this season, and when worn with a classic winter white blazer plus simple accessories, it looks sexy, not silly.
It's been a while since I did some thrift shopping, might
just heard out today and do some.
No, I know, but
just hear me out — I swear I'm being serious.
No I'm not on drugs,
just hear me out on this one.
Not exact matches
If you constantly surround yourself with people who believe
just like you do, then you are
hearing the same conversations, and you are not growing, and you are not learning to be open to perspectives,» Canaday cautions, so consciously seek
out diverse voices and listen deeply to what they have to say.
In any case, it's generally a good investment of the modest amount of time it takes to pay attention and be polite unless the people pitching haven't done their homework, don't appreciate or want to
hear about the magnitude or difficulty of what they're setting
out to do, or
just aren't really prepared to effectively present and defend their ideas.
The best talk in the world will land flat if it's introduced at a moment when the audience isn't ready to
hear it (
just as, entrepreneur readers will note, even excellent, groundbreaking products fall flat if they're
out of the sync with the market).
I've
heard of a small company that missed its profit - sharing trigger by
just a few thousand dollars due to an employee who was stealing merchandise; as a result, the company didn't give
out bonuses and ended up with a very bitter staff.
Just hearing yourself say that
out loud, I honestly believe, makes it tougher to support your case that you can't lend someone 10 minutes of your time in between meetings.
Let's
just say that in a crowded Fall market for IPOs, a lot of investors are making a point of coming
out to
hear our story.
If it'd help to see a measurement conversion instead of
just hearing it said
out loud (there are 16 tablespoons in a cup, by the way), the Echo Show is a really good option.
If you're left
out of meetings, rarely get face time with upper management, and have never even
heard of the big project everyone else is so excited about, that could mean that your bosses
just see you as a body filling a desk, rather than as a valuable contributor.
There are people
out there that will like me, they
just need to
hear the story and make that determination for themselves.
If you've never
heard of Berkshire Hathaway — or
just don't know much about the company — check
out the post below, which first appeared on WSJ's Moneybeat:
Likely
just by saying, «No,» and
hearing a «no» is something that every salesperson faces whether they are
just starting
out or have been selling for 15 years.
Instead, Cindy Gordon, VP of Marketing at the Orlando resort, did what is becoming more and more common these days to get the word
out; they approached influential Harry Potter bloggers,
just seven of them to be exact, and within 24 hours 350 million people worldwide had
heard of the new attraction.
Kahlon added, «I've also never
heard of an instance where the B.C. Liberal government gave
out a $ 200,000 grant
just before an election and didn't hold an event to draw attention to it.
She's spent time in places you've never
heard of... researched more markets, scrutinized more deals, and checked
out more projects in the region than
just about anyone you're likely to meet.Margaret is also the editor of Pathfinder's free e-letter, The Pathfinder Alert.
Haven t
heard about it much lately... maybe they re doing it and not talking about it (buying dollars)...
just awfully strange that with our wages stagnating and unemployment at 14 % when you count people who drop
out of the workforce and pparttimers who can t get fulltime work — that the dollar is surging as it is.
«They had
just been taught this amazing art of decision - making where you express your dissent, lobby each other,
hear everyone
out, and then get to a decision.
If you enjoyed their insights and would like to
hear more, check
out our archive of previous episodes and subscribe on iTunes, Google Play, or
just about any other major podcast provider.
Given today's florid emotionalism when it comes to discussing Wall Street finances, it hardly is surprising that the Angelides
hearings do not dare venture into such territory as to ask whether the bottom 90 % of the U.S. economy might need to be bailed
out with debt relief
just as Wall Street's elites were.
I'm
just throwing it
out there for those who have never
heard of it.
Included in the
hearings» evidence is an exasperated e-mail sent by Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson's chief of staff, Jim Wilkinson, on Sept. 9, 2008: «I
just can't stomach us bailing
out lehman.
To be honest, we knew this all along; we
just had not
heard Bernanke say it
out loud.
It is about time leaders of Faith, speak
out and call on their people to follow the teachings of Christ, not
just mouth the words, but live them... I know more non Catholics that are thinking of converting than I have
heard ever....
Don't ever pour your
hear out to them, because they'll
just pour salt into your wounds.
When was the last time you went against your intuition or gut feelings
just to
hear yourself say «I knew I shouldn't have done that, I somehow knew it wouldn't work
out»?
The atheists love calling us sheep and I say... «yes, I am of the flock of the Good Shepherd»; every time I
hear them call
out «sheep» it reminds me of how Jesus goes
out into the desert to find even one lost sheep and to do so He leaves the 99 others... those lost sheep are being found every day... some try to hide in the darkest places but all they need to see is
just a little Light and they lose their fear.
I'd take a penny for everytime I have
heard someone talk about
just what NP brought
out — but when the conversation turns towards the hatred for Americans in other nations — they begin to make excuses for their bigotry.
«There's a scene in Breaking Bad «s first season in which Walter White's hoodrat lab assistant Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul) tells Walter he
just can't «break bad,» and — when you first
hear this snippet of dialogue — you assume what Jesse means is that you can't go from being a law - abiding chemistry teacher to an underground meth cooker... But this, it turns
out, was not Jesse's point at all.
Then I thought abaout having
just a salad, but I could
hear all the tomatoes crying
out from their graves.
Sorry, if this comes off as some super-sensitive defensive reaction, it
just struck me really odd as I've only ever
heard one person phrase the differences between men and women quite that way before and it was a man who was also an engineer which he kept bringing up to point
out that that made him more analytical than any woman was capable of (apparently they don't have women engineers where he comes from).
I
just wish some days that I could get
out of my way (pain) to allow myself to
hear it.
Just go
out your front door and listen... you
hear people shouting, cars driving, radios, TV, the list is endless.
But
hearing the gospel
out of someone else's mouth will do
just fine to create faith in people.