Sentences with phrase «much pity on»

Not exact matches

It's a pity I wasted so many years of my life on him, and I hate that my kids all suffered so much, but I am happy to be out of that toxic relationship.
It would be a pity if those among us spent so much time focusing on the sins or not sins of others, that in our enthusiasm to judge others we forget to make our own backsides fireproof.
He was never on the same footballing planet as Sanchez... But I know fourth place junkies wax lyrically about his pace... Pity he can't do much with a ball at his feet
It is a pity we didn't utilize him earlier on in the season, but at least now hopefully Wenger can see he has major potential and already slotting in well as Arteta, with much respect, should call it a day after this injury.
(If you view the former and wonder why I seem to be staring slack - jawed into space much of the time, please have pity on me; it was a remote interview where you can't see the person talking to you, and it was extremely unnerving.
I like very much it on you and the necklace goes perfect... what a pity it is broken now!
The same accident plays out twice more elsewhere in America, on the plains of Wyoming and in the Florida Everglades: anyone who has played the game or seen the trailer will already know the results, but the film has so much fun unveiling them it would be a pity to give them away in print.
On a more positive note: The maps are huge and unique in geography, the vehicles are very much fun to use, all of them, except maybe the inflatable landing boats, and the combat roles the different classes play out is refreshing: The sniper can lay down claymores and sit back, plinking enemies from, in some maps, perhaps up to a quarter of a mile away, considering he / she is good, and has a good gaming rig, the combat medic can heal allies, and revive those who were fragged, saving them from having to respawn back at base, the support guy can lay down suppressing fire and resupply his allies with ammo, the spec ops guy can sabotage bridges, vehicles, and team assets (such as artillery and UAV trailers) with sticky C4 charges (pity the soldier who takes off in a jet only to have it explode in midflight from a hidden c4 charge stuck on it's body), The engineer repairs vehicles and lays down anti-tank mines, the anti-armour troop works on destroying said vehicles with wire - guided rockets (note that the armour guy in bf2 has his own gun ALONG with a pistol, not just a pistol like in 1942), and the assault guy..On a more positive note: The maps are huge and unique in geography, the vehicles are very much fun to use, all of them, except maybe the inflatable landing boats, and the combat roles the different classes play out is refreshing: The sniper can lay down claymores and sit back, plinking enemies from, in some maps, perhaps up to a quarter of a mile away, considering he / she is good, and has a good gaming rig, the combat medic can heal allies, and revive those who were fragged, saving them from having to respawn back at base, the support guy can lay down suppressing fire and resupply his allies with ammo, the spec ops guy can sabotage bridges, vehicles, and team assets (such as artillery and UAV trailers) with sticky C4 charges (pity the soldier who takes off in a jet only to have it explode in midflight from a hidden c4 charge stuck on it's body), The engineer repairs vehicles and lays down anti-tank mines, the anti-armour troop works on destroying said vehicles with wire - guided rockets (note that the armour guy in bf2 has his own gun ALONG with a pistol, not just a pistol like in 1942), and the assault guy..on it's body), The engineer repairs vehicles and lays down anti-tank mines, the anti-armour troop works on destroying said vehicles with wire - guided rockets (note that the armour guy in bf2 has his own gun ALONG with a pistol, not just a pistol like in 1942), and the assault guy..on destroying said vehicles with wire - guided rockets (note that the armour guy in bf2 has his own gun ALONG with a pistol, not just a pistol like in 1942), and the assault guy....
From the outside, there's not much to pity about the Belle Brigade's debut, which earned rave reviews and led to a coveted spot on the soundtrack for one of the hit «Twilight» movies.
The Girl Who Played with Fire is much more of a thriller than a traditional murder mystery — a pity since one of the reasons I liked the first film was that I hadn't seen a straight murder mystery on the big screen for quite some time.
For instance, much of the charter movement has been about educating poor children based on pity.
Its also a pity Audi put so much effort into the interior only to be wasted on such a bland looking generic Audi exterior!
This had the feel of all those photographs from American magazines, the kind Yitzhak had peeled through while sitting in a white - walled sanitorium somewhere west of London, with nurses who smelled of rosewater and bleach, and who never once showed an excess of pity for all those dreadful things that had happened but instead very kindly — very sternly — said it was a good time to be on the mend, time to push on, it wasn't much good thinking about anyway, and weren't the photographs of America quite lovely?
It's a pity Sega didn't choose to make an Xbox 360 version (after all, there presumably wouldn't have been much development difference to PC) and also that the Xbox version is not backwards compatible on 360; it would be nice to have that extra layer of visual definition that the new machine could add.
It's just a pity their arrogance makes them miss out on so much fun and socialise in a global community:)
The real pity is that once you've beaten the game and levelled most of the buildings on Mars there isn't much reason to keep playing.
Pity the text seems to be gone from the wheel, but I guess that's because Nintendo wants to make it so much easier on their translation teams.
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