Sentences with phrase «last sentence just»

I understand that if you're math - averse that last sentence just came out sounding like Charlie Brown's teacher — so here's an example: If you make $ 50,000 per year and you contribute 6 % (which is $ 3,000) to your QRP, the employer matches that amount fifty cents per dollar, or $ 1,500.

Not exact matches

I am not a Mormon and don't find it appealing or convincing but I wouldn't vote against him just because he is a Mormon.I do apologize for that last sentence.
If you had to read that last sentence over again because it sounded like I was saying the same thing twice, you just proved my point.
Oh sorry can you delete all my comments of 5th june except first, last and second last and if possibe edit sentences in which i have written sorry, spellcheck and merge all my comments of 5 june i have just now came to know that there was some problems in settings if my browser that's why my comments were being copied and i was having problems correcting spelling mistakes and so as a resilt hitting the post comment by mistake most if the time i was anle to stop it by pressing the x in my browser but some of the time i couldn't thanks
Obviously, that's quite a crazy thing to even use your name in the same sentence, but hopefully The Rocket Summer, in a much smaller way, could last a long time and be something that people bring their kids to shows and it's just a big hang.
That sentence ends the last chapter of a book whose previous eight sections are just as jarring and rich.
(Yes, I just up - talked that last sentences — ha ha)
I quit my mentally debilitating corporate job last week, no clue if I'll be landing a dietetic internship or getting into a masters program, partially broke, fully single, directionless as to where I'll be a few months from now or even next week, emotions running at an extreme and overall just a mess of run on sentences.
If you're not following my fodmaps posts, just disregard that last sentence, use a regular (wheat) tortilla, and enjoy the vegan recipe to follow.
If from that last sentence you didn't understand my sarcasm then shall we just get straight back to the caramel talk?
As for the last sentence, it just means to not add the baking soda until you're ready to fry.
Just read @ 58 and wanted to say the last sentence in my @ 59 wasn't directed at your post (which I mostly agree with) but only to reflect my general feeling.
Personally, I'm getting rather tired of hearing the sentence «The last Italian team to win the treble was Inter Milan in 2009 - 10,» but that's just me.
We're already hearing from magistrates that cuts to YOT budgets in just the last year are impacting their sentencing options.
Weiner's showing (argh — the unintended double entendres are just beginning) is mostly about name recognition: I was in North Carolina last weekend, talking to people from Chattanooga, Austin, and Phoenix, and before I could finish the sentence «I write about New York politics,» they'd blurt out, «Anthony Weiner!»
For example, one author says to turn first to food for your nutrient needs, and only to supplements as a last resort, and yet in the next sentence she seems to see no contradiction in recommending consuming «fortified» foods.2 The author doesn't seem to be aware of the fact that «fortified» just means that while processing the food manufacturers have added a synthetic vitamin or mineral supplement.
Just click the link in the last sentence for that discussion.
When last seen, British director Tom Hooper had just overseen a historical biography about a stammering monarch, someone who felt ill - equipped to take the throne, a chap who couldn't get a sentence out without scrunching up in agony.
But his emphasis in those last couple sentences, about having earned all his money through work so just shut it and don't worry, give inquiring minds pause.
(I m sorry fot the last sentence, I just have a trustproblem at Ferraris, maybe it is not justified at all, MM, please prove me lies!)
Hmm, more beautiful; I just covered that in the last sentence.
Barbara elegantly collapses into one sentence the last several years of the ebook wars and, even more importantly, identifies all stakeholders in the reading ecology: not just publishers and libraries, but authors and readers.
Critical essays can gain an impressive look if the last sentence is just the one that comes with the ability to capture the reader's attention, proving them to think further on another angle of this particular subject.
The last sentence with its «the issue was decided» explodes with association — an issue of the old magazine, the emotional issue between husband and wife and, just to certify the Biblical precedent, «issue» as offspring.
I can guarantee I would not be stuck in this mode if I hadn't just spent the last 5 years grading the assignments of college students who can't seem to put together a grammatically correct sentence as simple as «See Jane run.»
Your last sentence says it all... just keep writing!
I can't believe I'm downvoting such a high ranking member, but I just did because (as of right now) I can't find any evidence to support your answer - particularly your last sentence.
But there is more than just the first half of the sentence, the last part is equally important «called according to His purpose».
For those of you who just cringed at that last sentence, let me tell you, it was 100 % worth it.
------- @ VideoGameLab It would have taken just a little bit of brain power to read my last sentence which would have made you re-think again about trying to argue what you're arguing.
Your username fits like the glass shoe fit Cinderella, just change «annoyed» to «annoying» Also, was your last sentence sarcasm because i'm pretty sure what you describe is really 99 % of movies and games.
If you missed that announcement, don't worry, since I just said it again in that last sentence.
That last sentence wasn't sarcastic, just for clarification.
Just take a moment to read those last two sentences again and think about how many hours of gameplay we have seen in a very short period this year.
But let's just look at that last sentence again.
I apologise, I just realised in the last sentence you ask «Is the Xbox a more attractive console now?»
As a New Yorker who's been able to see the show at Elizabeth Harris, I want to endorse heartily everything Paul says — everything except the last sentence / incomplete sentence: «Just as it should be.»
I would just like to pick up on the last sentence in this piece on the wolves, «As human populations expand, there'll be ever more such clashes between human interests and those of wide - ranging wildlife, whether in the Serengeti or Wyoming.»
Just think about that last sentence in this excerpt with some slight adjustments (the italics) to make it about news media instead of campaigners:
With regard to the last sentence of the APS statement, the role of physicists is not just ``... to support policies and actions...» but also to participate actively in the research itself.
(If you think that last sentence was hard to read just think of how hard it was to type.)
I just learned from a helpful reader that yesterday the Second Circuit rejected the government's appeal of this sentence (in this summary order), based largely on the strength of the Circuit's work last week in its en banc Cavera decision (basics here, comments here on Cavera).
But the changes to the last sentence do just the opposite.
Chris neatly sums it up in the last sentence «This is not the end of lawyers but it just might be the end of lawyering as we know it.»
So just to catch you non-Booker people up on what you've missed in the last few years: There used to be a lack of uniformity in sentencing.
I will continue to try and obtain justice for those people effectively given a death sentence by just going to work but can not recover compensation because not only is there no fund of last resort for employers liability claims, backed by a database, but the government has now seen fit to relax the requirement that insurance records be kept for 40 years, somehow seeing this as the exception to the increased regulation seen in nearly every other aspect of life.
Sir Igor Judge, President of the Queen's Bench Division, has defended court judges criticised for imposing «unduly lenient» sentences as newly released statistics showed sentences were increased in just over 100 out of about 80,000 cases dealt with by the crown court last year.
Just a couple of sentences from two or three top leaders in your field could make a lasting impression on prospective employers.
The technology to record interviews was only just coming onto the market, so we learned shorthand for our interviews (my intern looked at me blankly last week when I mentioned «shorthand» and wanted to know what on earth it was... but then she also looked confused when I said a sentence she'd written in a story was «gilding the lily».)
I imagine this is how many of God's children feel after they are adopted into His Kingdom — just in awe that a Father — Abba — could possibly love them so much and wanting to make sure that He will never leave them or «throw them away» or «put them out in the dark» — our past is often where Satan lurks in the shadows but the more we grow in our walk with our Daddy the more those shadows are brought to light and those fears are dispelled... I am so thankful for your last sentence in your blog — that you have never felt so much responsibility to pour Love and Truth into your son — exactly what's Sonny needs to break through those fears and doubts — glad you shared your heart!
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