Sentences with phrase «kind of different story»

Connecting to Android was more of a process and kind of a different story.
that is all kind of different story.
This is a day for people to get together to tell all kinds of different stories.

Not exact matches

IA Architects used different kinds of moss to create a living wall with more depth and texture than your average patch of grass in LinkedIn's 26 - story San Francisco offices
The business model is the first of its kind, not only because of how it brings e-commerce to life, but because STORY includes paid brand partners who «sponsor» different iterations.
Though the market for say, iPhone cords might seem to be booming, the story is different for the kind of industrial wires that General Cable (BGC) makes.
It's certainly a unique story for those searching for a different kind of zombie movie.
We often read in the press rather alarming stories about the rise of an ugly and belligerent nationalism in China, but while these stories are certainly very real, after the November 13 bombings in Paris I was struck by a very different kind of Chinese behavior.
But the point is that IN THAT CONTEXT Calvinist theology was a much - needed pastoral and communal approach that helped people to break from the shackles of long - established systems of spiritual abuse by offering a different story to live by and a different kind of community to live in.
Different kinds of stories function in different ways, but stories do function to form or transform persons in their world views and liDifferent kinds of stories function in different ways, but stories do function to form or transform persons in their world views and lidifferent ways, but stories do function to form or transform persons in their world views and lifestyles.
Recognizing the different social functions of different kinds of stories offers a route into a more nuanced educational theory of the narrative method.
And the story of its life must once again have been wholly different in order to express continually immortality's difference from all the changeableness and the different kinds of variations of the perishable.
We know that the Bible was written by lots of different human beings, and we know that humans often embellish or change stories for all kinds of reasons.
For Neuhaus, «right - wing» and «left - wing» describe two different kinds of dissenters from Catholic orthodoxy, the two branches of the party of discontinuity, which are «united in their agreement that the Second Vatican Council was a decisive break in the story of the Catholic Church.»
Christine Money has a different set of prison stories that offer another kind of hope.
Now that people are more aware of how this scheme works it might be a different story, just as how more people are now aware of how the Bible was actually written and the actual age of the universe to actually accept it as completely factual and as any kind of evidence for a god.
But where the motivations have been a devotion to Christ and a sharing of his love for all kinds of persons, the story has been quite different.
Then, I think, this Gospel goes on to lead the reader beyond the point where one is concerned with the physical body of Christ; and in the story of Thomas it shows that faith is not to be established by sight; that you have got to look beyond any objective truth of the kind which might be established by visible, tangible, corporeal manifestations: to look beyond that to something different.
why don't you start with why humans invented religion in the first place, the origins of the books of the bible, the multiple «christ» (copied) stories throughout the history of time, fossil evidence of evolution of man and all species, all the discrepancies in the bible, knowledge of all the gods that humans have believed in through recorded history, the political uses of christianity in the time of it's origin, the fact that every other religion has followers who believe just as strongly in their own god / book, that fact that if you had been born in another part of the world you would be a different religion and going to «hell», and that a good, kind, omniscient god wouldn't allow all the suffering and evil to happen, and wouldn't need «help» as christians like to tout... and then we'll get to all these ridiculous fools.
We love Disney movies and animated films in general because of how dynamic the art form is and how it can uniquely tell different kinds of stories that live - action ones can't.
I ended up topping the pumpkin pie smoothie bowl with gluten - free superfood creamy pumpkin pie (all kinds of crazy things happen at the Breakfast Criminals HQ, for experiment purposes of course, but that's a different story).
Long story short, Spacey learns some important lessons on fatherhood from the family cat, which got us wondering what kind of feline best embodies all the different parenting styles.
I had no idea what kind of stories I would get when I cast my net, I didn't know if I would get ten stories, maybe all on the same topic, or a bunch of different accumulated stories.
We love this kind of stories and if anyone listening, if you guys have a story that you would like us to read on the show, you can submit it to us in a couple of different ways.
I mean, it's kind of an absurd thing and it's like, I had this story I used read a lot when I would do presentations and it was from this and I used to just read this sort of paragraph and people just with their mouth open because they were talking about as a mother sort of emerges from this sort of hut where she's been isolated and she emerges and she walks toward the village with their baby and they're singing songs to her sung by that they sing for warriors returning from battle, it's a totally different thing than what our moms experience.
Video often evokes a stronger emotional reaction than text or still images alone, making it a powerful way to tell stories or make a political point, but online video isn't television — the kinds of content that succeeds can be quite different, with authenticity (that word again!)
But it is creating a host of new opportunities for doing better journalism, covering more places and stories and engaging more people at all kinds of different levels.
Video often evokes a stronger emotional reaction than text or still images alone, making it a powerful way to tell stories or make a political point, but online video isn't television — the kinds of content that succeeds can be quite different, with authenticity and topic typically more important than polished visuals.
This kind of story is probably replicated in all different scales up and down the country and highlights that a strategy of deficit reduction without a plan for growth can create a Japanese - style vicious circle.
Its ending was known — 66 children entered a hospital on different dates and became infected with two kinds of viruses — but how did the story begin?
This story appears in the June 24, 2017, issue of Science News with the headline, «The opportunity zone: Exoplanets found in a narrow band around M dwarf stars could host a very different kind of life.»
Outside the lab, Aragon is on a different kind of recovery mission, using her own story to help students and colleagues uncover hidden potential.
Yasmina Ykelenstam: Pursuing a story and I wanted to do something different with my blog which was — I mean maybe not different, but there aren't many bloggers who kind of approached things from the scientific standpoint --
my understanding of regular potatoes any color skin flesh etc. is this... potatoes are on the dirty dozen list... sweet potatoes are on the clean 15... i eat over 50 % of my diet in the form of a few different colors of sweet potatoes... i buy them bulk... peel»em very deeply... at least 1/2 inch all around... i sometimes get them as large as 6 pounds (football sized)... i used to wear out the regular potatoes but after speaking with the safety expert from a huge potato company to find out if the potatoes are grown on soil which had grain crops treated with round - up herbicide filled with atrazine and glyphosate (which most grain crops are... inluding many wheat crops... they get sprayed like 3 days before harvest... then the round - up is in the soil)... problem is... the round - up stays for 7 years... after stayin» off the soil for a couple years... it can have any kind of crop planted on it and get an organic rating... but... whatever was planted on that soil is then full of round - up... so... this crop rotation onto fields which had grain crops sprayed with round - up herbicide etc. is EXTREMELY COMMON IN THE GROWING PRACTICE FOR REGULAR POTATOES... very common practice... so even if you peel»em deeply... they are still soaked with round - up... the glyphosates get in the gut... the aluminum which is all over everything grown above ground and not covered (hot house etc)... gets eaten9ya can't wash it off... unless ya peel everything... but greens etc. ya can not get it out... it gets in the fiber)... then ya eat it... it goes in the gut... mixes with the glyphosate... becomes 10,000 timesmore toxic... inhibits the bodies ability to properly process sulfur into sulfide and sulfate... basically many very smart researchers are sayin'this is the cause of all this asperger's... autism... alzheimer's like symptoms in the elderly... you can only take so much nano... pico... and heavy metal poisoning... the brain starts to act very strangely... so... long story short... i eat lots of sweet pots grown on clean soil... they are non-gmo and basically grown organically... but... the grower doesn't pay for the certification... i make sure to get my omega 3 from fresh ground flax seed in the morning away from my sweet potato consumption... the omega 6 in the sweet pots inhibits the absorption of omega 3 and i only want so much fat daily... i'm on the heart attack proof diet by dr. caldwell b. esselstyn jr....
This is a different kind of story.
I'm typically not the kind of person that holds on to summer for as long as I can in the sense of the season itself — summer vacation is a completely different story.
She goes to say that, as society becomes more permissive, we are becoming more aware of the fact that `' other types of love can exist,» and that people are more willing to `' experiment with different kind of passion and love stories «but that we still treat monogamous relationships as the default, in large part, perhaps, because of this societal conditioning.That said, «the study demonstrates that there are actually still plenty of people out there who do value monogamy and want to build a lasting and loving relationship.»
This week we have something a little different for our readers, One of members was kind enough to let us know his story of using our site and what it meant to him, so without further ado here is his story.
We bring to you stories of different kinds, poems, articles and other blurbs, written by our writers and other featured writers.
A great story line that allows you to play again to get a different outcome (kind of like inFamous but not as radical).
The Walk is flawed — it tries to be three different kinds of movie (charming biography, heist flick, epic achievement story) and not every moment works completely, but it doesn't really matter.
SAME KIND OF DIFFERENT AS ME is based on the inspiring true story of international art dealer Ron Hall (Greg Kinnear), who befriends a homeless man (Djimon Hounsou) in hopes of saving his struggling marriage to Debbie (Renée Zellweger), a woman whose dreams will lead all three of them on the most remarkable journey of their liveOF DIFFERENT AS ME is based on the inspiring true story of international art dealer Ron Hall (Greg Kinnear), who befriends a homeless man (Djimon Hounsou) in hopes of saving his struggling marriage to Debbie (Renée Zellweger), a woman whose dreams will lead all three of them on the most remarkable journey of their liveof international art dealer Ron Hall (Greg Kinnear), who befriends a homeless man (Djimon Hounsou) in hopes of saving his struggling marriage to Debbie (Renée Zellweger), a woman whose dreams will lead all three of them on the most remarkable journey of their liveof saving his struggling marriage to Debbie (Renée Zellweger), a woman whose dreams will lead all three of them on the most remarkable journey of their liveof them on the most remarkable journey of their liveof their lives.
It's big enough that you can tell different kinds of stories, it's intriguing enough that people want to hear about those...
Films that might have fit this putative strand included the charming but overlong Timeless Stories, co-written and directed by Vasilis Raisis (and winner of the Michael Cacoyannis Award for Best Greek Film), a story that follows a couple (played by different actors at different stages of the characters» lives) across the temporal loop of their will - they, won't - they relationship from childhood to middle age and back again — essentially Julio Medem - lite, or Looper rewritten by Richard Curtis; Michalis Giagkounidis's 4 Days, where the young antiheroine watches reruns of Friends, works in an underpatronized café, freaks out her hairy stalker by coming on to him, takes photographs and molests invalids as a means of staving off millennial ennui, and causes ripples in the temporal fold, but the film is as dead as she is, so you hardly notice; Bob Byington's Infinity Baby, which may be a «science - fiction comedy» about a company providing foster parents with infants who never grow up, but is essentially the same kind of lame, unambitious, conformist indie comedy that has characterized U.S. independent cinema for way too long — static, meticulously framed shots in pretentious black and white, amoral yet supposedly lovable characters played deadpan by the usual suspects (Kieran Culkin, Nick Offerman, Megan Mullally, Kevin Corrigan), reciting apparently nihilistic but essentially soft - center dialogue, jangly indie music at the end, and a pretty good, if belated, Dick Cheney joke; and Petter Lennstrand's loveably lo - fi Up in the Sky, shown in the Youth Screen section, about a young girl abandoned by overworked parents at a sinister recycling plant, who is reluctantly adopted by a reconstituted family of misfits and marginalized (mostly puppets) who are secretly building a rocket — it's for anyone who has ever loved the Tintin moon adventures, books with resourceful heroines, narratives with oddball gangs, and the legendary episode of Angel where David Boreanaz turned into a Muppet.
It's a sad state of affairs that Lelio is one of the only male directors working today who seems truly devoted to finding new and different kinds of women - centric stories to tell on film.
Holland's Spidey is a different kind of success story.
Both characters are subject to different kinds of isolation as they pine for each other; their determination to reconnect becomes as much an existential journey as a love story.
These investigations are hardly challenging at all, but serve to break up the action and give the player some new story information in a different kind of way.
What I will say though is while Cave Story + is a rather cool game you can blitz through in a couple of hours (depending on what kind of a difficulty you choose,) be prepared to play through it more than once as there are many different endings to experience, but the levels are wonderfully designed so re-experiencing them more than once won't be an issue.
From James Wan comes a different kind of haunted house tale based on the true story of mediums Ed and Lorraine Warren.
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