Sentences with phrase «like events described»

I don't remember any rapture - like events described therein, but I may have missed it.

Not exact matches

Tom Barrack, the private - equity investor overseeing Trump's inauguration, has described this year's event as more low - key, less of a «circus - like celebration.»
At a recent event hosted by Bloomberg, Son described how he has come back from low points like the dotcom crash, thanks to his «fighting» spirit.
When it comes to describing murderous acts tied to groups like ISIS / ISIL, al - Qaeda, or Boko Haram, it's worth nothing that those events have a dual purpose: to instill fear in non-believers and to incite believers to join the cause.
Apple is expected to announce a number of new products and services at its event on Wednesday, but for media types one of the most important will be the company's newest take on news aggregation: Apple News, a curated selection of headlines from media partners that almost everyone has described as «Flipboard - like
Many of the possible apps the two co-founder brothers described during a press briefing seemed to focus on interactive mobile games like scavenger hunts, in which fans can get rewards for performing certain actions during a sporting event, like buying some food or tickets.
And there's the Clio Cloud Conference, which attracted 1,000 attendees last year to a two - day event: «Sort of like the Burning Man festival of the legal industry,» is how one impressed attendee described it.
Tyerman writes almost like his medieval sources, describing a few events and then heading off on narrative tangents.
Having said this, however, we must also notice what ought in any event to have been obvious: that the several gospels are collections of brief tales, remembered incidents, bits of sayings, and the like, all gathered together in the interest of giving what St. Mark's opening words so well describe: «the beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ the Son of God» — the account of the historical happenings, as the Christian community remembered them, which gave rise to the faith that Jesus is the promised Messiah and the divine Lord.
I described being uncomfortable at events like the Cowboy Olympics, my fears that I would never marry as I was often the only black single in the church, how at times I felt strange or like an alien as well - meaning friends would ask questions about my hair and skin, etc..
Like Professor MacKinnon in his Easter meditation, I based my sermon on the assumption that there was an objective Easter event, and that it was this event which produced the dramatic change in the outlook of the disciples; that to speak of «Easter» is not a way of describing the disciples» growing conviction that Jesus had been right after all; but that it was only because something real and objective and totally unexpected had actually happened at Easter that the disciples became changed men.
Acts 2 is describing the event of the Holy Spirit descending on the disciples on the day of Pentecost; not what a believer looks like.
At one point in the series, she describes the attendance of these events as profoundly spiritual, even worship - like experiences.
Scientists like Hawking tell us: God has no place in any scientific equations, plays no role in any scientific explanations, can not be used to predict any events, does not describe anything or force that has yet been detected, and there are no models of the universe in which a god's presence is either required, productive, or useful.
The «Left Behind» fiction series by Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins borrows its title from passages like those in Luke 17 in which Jesus describes events of the end times.
The word «Trinity» is the «articulation» of the Form of God, just like the word «Rapture» describes the event of the believers being caught up together in the clouds with the Lord Jesus Christ.
It is easier to understand Stapp's argument if one thinks of a set of N apparatuses like that described, in each of which a neutron - neutron scattering event has just occurred at the center of the horizontal tube and the two neutrons have ceased to interact and are on their respective ways down the opposite halves of the tube.
Describing his experience at the inaugural LOUDER THAN LIFE in 2014, Oli Sykes of Bring Me The Horizon recently toldRevolver (October / November 2015), «They're turning these festivals into more than a festival — it's like an event for everyone to come to, and I think that's something that a lot of festivals lack these days.
Lord Sebastian Coe, president of the IAAF, described the event as «one of the most successful of all time» and continued by saying: «I'd like to thank the organising committee, Birmingham City Council, the athletes and the fans — who fought through pretty extraordinary weather conditions to be here.»
Events like some of those described here — with six Supreme Court judges annulling a national election on flimsy if not illegal grounds, Parliament deliberately disrespecting the overwhelming result of a constitutional referendum — are simply not supposed to happen in a democracy.
He described going to court in regards to a voter registration issue: «The judge looked like Charlene de Blasio,» he said during a Republican event.
CLIMATE scientists tend to shy away from assigning blame for extreme weather events like the fictional heatwave described above.
As University of Aarhus's Vandkilde puts it: «It's an army like the one described in Homeric epics, made up of smaller war bands that gathered to sack Troy» — an event thought to have happened fewer than 100 years later, in 1184 B.C.E..
«The impact of this earlier event was described as though a huge razor had shaved off all the coral growth and it is still like this today.
Event attribution studies like the one described in the paper can help lead to improved understanding.
Three Methods: Describing Yourself in an Interview Describing Yourself at a Networking Event Describing Yourself on Would you like to see examples of profile descriptions of yourself and your ideal match?
M. Night Shyamalan's 2000 superhero movie Unbreakable is the rare film that's still cool to like, even if it wasn't a commercial or critical smash on its original release, but due to an unfortunate series of events that can only be described as «his next few movies,» Shyamalan has had trouble recreating that level of...
David Mann (Dennis Weaver) is on his way to a meeting with a client way out woop - woop, driving his nice and shiny new red Plymouth (much like the valiant my father used to own) when a short «incident» with a very run down truck triggers off a sequence of events that can only really be described as pre-meditated road rage.
From the moment Glen whips out a tape recorder and asks Russell to describe the previous night's events, it's clear the two are nothing like each other.
I do this as someone who played a role in the events that I describe: in 2011 and 2012, I was part of the policy team working on the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) waiver initiative and grant programs like the Teacher Incentive Fund (TIF), and played a role in spreading the Obama administration's teacher evaluation policies across the country.
As a result of the current analysis and mandated Holocaust teaching standards, it is evident that particular attention needs to be paid to developing resources that help users locate and identify with information describing the social and political climate leading up to a catastrophic event like the Holocaust.
I like the way Dr Will Thalheimer moves on from this and describes how to increase retention with spaced learning events, repetition and practice — all great techniques for combatting the tendency to forget.
A descriptive essay is, just like its name suggests, an essay in which you describe a person, place, object, or event.
To sum up: Sounds like what you're saying is that an audit would not likely happen * without a review first * since, in the chronology you describe, there seems to be a definitive sequence of events.
An event like this was likely to happen for the reasons I described above.
Setting aside Potter's curious view of events for the moment, though, I find his core argument truly bizarre: the bobwhite need to be protected from cats so that they can be killed (preferably «25 in a day,» just like in the good old days Potter describes in the Courier News article) by hunters.
However, as I mulled around this past week thinking about how I should write about this event, the realization that describing what it is like to experience virtual reality is extremely difficult.
- the team has been adding weapons one by one because they want the same amount of attention for each weapon - the team learned that when they added two new weapons at once, one would end up getting overshadowed by the other - there were more new stages than returning stages because bringing back old stages would have little surprise - since they want to satisfy both new and returning players, they changed the order of stage additions - there weren't any major direction changes in balancing from Splatoon 1 - there have been more pattern combinations between weapons and stages, so there was more involved to balance them all - matchmaking is handled by getting 8 players with similar rank points, and then they're split by weapons - the rank point gap between S + players is bigger than ordinary players - only about one in 1,000 active players are in the S +40 to S +50 region in Ranked Battles - there's even less than one in 10 players that reach S +, while 80 % of the overall player base are in A or less - about 90 % of S + ranked players are within a + / -150 hidden ranked power range - rock was the popular genre in Splatoon, so they tried changing it for the sequel - they prioritized making good background music first before forming the band to play that music - the design team would make the CD jacket - like artwork afterwards - due to this, the band members would often change; some getting added while some others removed - Off the Hook is an exception, as they first decided they would be a DJ and rapper along with their visuals first - Off the Hook's song came afterwards - In Splatoon street fashion was the trend, but in Splatoon 2 they tried adding more uniqueness - the aim was to add Flow with ethnic clothing and Jelfonzo with high fashion - all Jellyfish in this world are born by splitting, which means Jelfonzo was born by splitting from Jelonzo - Jellyfish are like a hive mind - when they hold a wedding ceremony, they're just simply holding the ceremony - Jelonzo and Jelfonzo start gaining their own consciences so they can speak - Flow used her working holiday to go on a trip before reaching Inkopolis Square - during the trip, she met the owner of Headspace - the owner liked her, so she got hired to work there - Bisk has a unique way of speaking: anastrophe - the team tried to express him as an adult man - they made him into a giant spider crab because they wanted someone with high posture - he came from a cold country and broke up with his girlfriend to join a band - just like Flow, he became attracted to squids - Crusty Sean finally has his own shop, but he opened it because he's someone who follows the current trends - one of the trends happens to be people opening their own shops - drink tickets aren't stacked, but the probability is higher than a single brand - the music in Inkopolis Square changes depending on the player's location - sounds contribute to creating atmosphere in the location - the song at front of Grizzco Industries had an atmosphere that feels like some smell can radiate from the game screen - as for Salmon Run, they imagined it as a Japanese restaurant outside Japan that is not run by a Japanese person - each time the player moves between the shops, the game uses an arrange shift that shows the personality of each inhabitant - the arrangement in Shella Fresh is related to Bisk's guitar and mystery files that describe his past - with the Squid Sisters moved to Hero Mode, Off the Hook was put in charge in guiding battles and festivals - Bomb Rush Blush has an orchestra «because it would sound like the final boss» - the team wanted to express the feel of the story's real culprit with this music - the probability of each event occurring in Salmon Run is different - there are no specific requirements, meaning they're picked randomly - this means it's possible for fog to appear three times in a row - the Salmon have different appearances based on the environment they're raised in - if the environment is harsher, they would become large salmon - Steelheads and Maws have big bodies, while Scrappers and Steel Eels have high intelligence - Salmons basically wield kitchenware, but everybody else has a virtue in fighting to actually cook the Salmons - Grill is the ultimate form of this - when Salmons are fighting to the death, they can feel the same sense of unity - they would be one with the world if they were eaten by other creatures, and they also fight for the pride of their race - MakoMart is based on a large supermarket in America - the update also took place on Black Friday in America, which was why Squids are buying a lot of things in the trailer - Arowana Mall looks like it has more passages because there are changes in tenants and also renovation work - Walleye Warehouse has no changes at all, because the team wanted to have at least one map that stayed intact - the only thing different in this map is the graffiti, which is based on the winner of Famitsu's Squid Fashion Contest - all members in the band Ink Theory graduated from music university - they are well - educated girls who also do aggressive things - the band members wearing neckties are respecting the Hightide Era from the prequel - the team will continue adding weapons and stages for a year, and Splatfests for two years - the team will also continue to make more updates including balancing
The sheer magic and hilarity of events like this is transcendental — it's a story that will be described to other gamers for years after the fact.
You may, however want to plan out your day because spending more than several hours at a time at a huge event like this is problematic not only because of the sprawl of the various studios (and those of you who are not familiar with the neighborhood, it is, as a friend described to me after 5 hours of our own migrations, «what SoHo used to look like in the» 70's).
In the 1952 essay, «The American Action Painters,» Rosenberg described Abstract Expressionist painters like Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning as creating «not a picture but an event,» using the canvas as «an arena in which to act.»
Swan describe the circumstances around the event like this:
After years of depicting landscapes and portraits in figurative watercolors, she described her shift to abstract compositions as an effort to capture not what a place or event «looked like, but what it made [her] feel.»
Other films describe a place through the viewpoint of an individual, like psychologist Dr. George Sieber describing the terrorist event at the Olympic Stadium in Munich in the film 1972 or the industry politics of Hollywood from the viewpoint of screenwriter and producer in the eponymous film Robert Towne.
In 1947, Parsons began to paint abstractly; she described this shift as an effort to capture not what a place or event «looked like, but what it made [her] feel.»
I asked him to elaborate and provide a few examples in which people described unfounded links between extreme events and global warming, and also whether he thought scientists and scientific institutions like the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change were beyond reproach.
How would one go about determining whether a «rare» event is actually a far from equilibrium effect like those described above and not simply a low probability event governed by the normal distribution?
Like the earlier warming event and migrations, the most recent northward advance of small fish such as sardines, anchovies and herring correlate very well with the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation and the current distribution of fish from southerly waters is «almost identical to that described by Aurich for 1951.»
Something like an extreme cold event related to sea ice loss obviously can not described in this way — it is a great example of a highly non-linear mechanism.
As described by Precedent, it «includes social media components, a student blog, videos, plenty of photos, events listings and, most notably, an interactive office tour set up like a game with «secret» content hidden throughout.»
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