Sentences with phrase «more romantic aspects»

When happy couples start planning the more romantic aspects of their lives together, they should also pay attention to the more pragmatic details, since marriage is also a business relationship: you're combining your assets, housing, even taxes, with your spouse.
This is a neat, domesticated landscape as far from Caspar David Friedrich as one could imagine: a rural idyll on an industrial scale — and yet the very contrast forces the comparison with what we know of the wilder, more romantic aspects of German culture.

Not exact matches

She's still deciding, she said on the Max & Murphy podcast, while also outlining key aspects of her political career thus far, her assessment of what's broken in our politics, what it means to be «a romantic about government,» her falling out with Cuomo, her assessment of Cynthia Nixon's candidacy, and more.
Seventy percent of survey respondents (18 to 25 - year - olds) reported wishing they had received more information from their parents about some emotional aspect of romantic relationships, and 65 % indicated that they wanted guidance on some emotional aspect of romantic relationships in a health or sex education class at school.
Romance is an essential aspect of any dating relationship, but a sugar daddy will pay a lot more attention to the romantic persuasion.
Listen, this biopic basically revolves around Jackie's earnest effort to turn Herman into a cause célèbre, but it carefully tiptoes around the more compelling elephant in the tiny cell, namely, whether there's a romantic aspect to their relationship?
One of the most appealing aspects of Drinking Buddies is that, in observing the dynamics of sexual and platonic attraction, it captures the intricacies of relationships and companionship, and the need for more than just romantic love in people's lives.
«Endless Love» is a serviceable enough romantic drama which largely follows the path of Franco Zeffirelli's 1981 film of the same name, though the some aspects have been changed for a more Hollywood ending.
One curious aspect of Curtis's filmography is that while he's more or less synonymous with romantic comedy, he's profoundly uninterested in romantic relationships.
The conflict at the film's center is a familiar standoff between good and evil (or «love and war»), and the romantic aspects occasionally become quite saccharine, but the fusion of mythological elements, period settings, comedy, and standard superhero action makes for an entertaining experience that's more than the sum of its parts.
One of the more refreshing aspects of Friends with Benefits is its gentle mocking of romantic comedy films and their conventions from within the confines of one, as the characters comment on the clichés much in the same way that Scream was refreshing as a horror flick.
America's most beloved and ill - considered romantic comedy gets a remake, one that will attempt to sidestep all of the 1987 film's more unsavory aspects — abduction, psychological abuse, slavery — by simply flipping the genders.
A good alternative is to focus more on aspects of the claimant's life that have resulted from having an alternative sexual orientation and not the sexual orientation itself: experience of non-conformity; the experience of being different; relationships with family, friends and the wider community and any persecutors amongst them; romantic and sexual relationships; religion and acts of persecution may all serve to verify his narrative without having to engage into a discussion whether the applicant is gay or not.
Furthermore, being romantic with each other on an ongoing basis is an important part of creating and maintaining a satisfying relationship because you and your partner both feel desired and more invested in the emotional aspects of your relationship.
People in romantic relationships really do drench their partners in a wave of idealised qualities, and downplay their more annoying aspects.
Researchers have refined and tweaked this definition of commitment since the 1980s, and it has become one of the single most - studied aspects of romantic relationships.2 More importantly for us, this flurry of empirical inquiry means we know a lot about the interaction between commitment and a person's future decision to stay or break up.
This aspect has not yet been examined in neuroscientific pain research, but a behavioural study in the context of stress showed that individuals felt more secure walking along a virtual cliff (a stress - inducing task) when their romantic partner was attentive vs inattentive to them (Kane et al., 2012).
In other words, we begin to take on some of our romantic partner's aspects into our sense of who we are (e.g., you may find that you have picked up interests or hobbies that your partner introduced you to), and we begin to talk more in terms of «us» and «we» than «me» and «him / her».
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