Sentences with phrase «much your words mean»

Not exact matches

Those who took notes by laptop were much faster — typed lecture notes come out at a rate of about 33 words a minute, compared to 22 words a minute for handwritten notes — but the tendency to take verbatim notes meant they were not truly engaging with the content.
«They're going to have to spend an absolute fortune to reposition the word Napster to mean something in 2016 and 2017, because it's got so much baggage around it,» Marks says.
«You can talk with someone for years, everyday, and still, it won't mean as much as what you can have when you sit in front of someone, not saying a word, yet you feel that person with your heart, you feel like you have known the person for forever....
Do typos in e-mails, or sloppy grammar in speech, bother you so much that you can't even see or hear the meaning of the words being used?
«Many expats think that learning a few vocabulary words and learning to navigate the new city or eating local cuisine means we've adapted, but living cross-culturally requires much deeper exploration of the values and beliefs of the local community.»
The legal issues that followed the initial 2014 contest meant the contest didn't happen that year, much to the disappointment of fans who had taken Buffet at his word that he wanted the contest to be easier to win in 2015.
One word that makes us happy: Progress [21:21] We grow because that helps us give more — share it with someone you love, it magnifies it [22:04] More excited about feeding one billion people than any material thing, so much more meaning when it's not just about you [22:19] The challenge is our brain: it's looking for what's wrong, because that helps you survive [22:30] Peak state = high energy, feel extraordinary, producing results is easy [22:46] Low energy state = say things and do things that hurt your relationship [23:39] Peak State = Beautiful state, Low - energy state = suffering state [24:08] Over achievers don't suffer, right?
I remember how much those words of thanks meant to me when I was in the Navy.»
Although we fundamentally disagree with this designation as the token is not a coin in the literal meaning of the term and this is not an offering in the financial meaning of the word, we have reluctantly decided to use the term ICO in order to provide as much clarity as possible to persons interested in purchasing SPRK.
This means a user can create a more custom address with an individuals name, a business brand, or pretty much any words rather than the traditional cryptically random addresses.
They meant his creativity in sourcing pre-crisis loans and then selling them based on unconventional appraisal methodologies; the loans went bad, the investors are suing Credit Suisse, and I don't really know or care that much about the substance but it is always harder to argue about the good faith of your loans when you have e-mails from your own bankers calling them naughty words.
Note, however, that silence can be used as much as words as a means of hate.
In some sense, of course, these words premodern, modern, and postmodern are too slippery to mean much.
Therefore, it is concerned as much with how words make us feel as their exact meaning — their connotation as much as denotation.
That we aren't all Christians as a result pretty much means that the «word of your god» is flawed, and his marketing department is something less than omnipotent.
There has been much misunderstanding of the meaning of the word destiny.
Is one saying words without much meaning just because it is the conventional thing to do?
Secondly, can you imagine if on gods level he's actually not nearly as powerful as you think he is, it's just he's so much more powerful than you (or at least you perceive him to be) that you give him powers he doesn't posess, I mean you are just taking other people from 2,000 word for it that this is what god is like and sure you pray, but like you said, you just know, god hasn't come down and spoken with you, sent you a note, a vision or any other nonesense.
These here are Christ's own words: But it seems that so many don't think much about what they mean, because they rather seek to get their faces on the big screen, loving the flattery and cheering of the ungodly... They have their reward!
@Tom — Do you mean is it interesting that HS uses the word «babble» a lot because it's likely the root word comes from the Tower of Babel where the bible claims the languages were confused, much like HS is in every post?
I don't normally think that dictionary definitions bring much to any argument, but in the case of creationism vs evolution, its shameful that one side can't even be bothered to know the meaning of the word that they're using in highly semantic arguments.
But nephesh, the word that is so often translated «soul,» means much less (see Ps.
Jeremy Myers, i think you are wrong and David is right, so many out there are preaching you can live any way you want and be right that Grace covers any sin, they really believe that, that is not what the bible says, God was very concerned about sin so much he sent Jesus his son to die on a cross for us, if we accept Jesus as our savor then we are to obey his commandments, not break them, we are to live a righteous and holy life as possible, the bible plainly list a whole list of things if we live in will not to to heaven unless we repent, if we die while in these sins, we will not go to heaven, what is the difference, between someone who said a prayer and someone who did not, and they are living the same way, none, i think, if we are truly saved it should be hard to do these things let alone live and do them everyday, i would be afraid to tell people that it does not matte grace covers their sins, i really think it is the slip ups that we are convicted of by the Holy Spirit and we ask for forgivness, how can anyones heart be right with God and they have sex all the time out of marriage, lie, break every commandment of God, i don't think this is meaning grace covers those sins, until they repent and ask for forgiveness, a lot of people will end up in hell because preachers teach Grace the wrong way,, and those preachers will answer to God for leading these people the wrong way, not saying you are one of them, but be careful, everything we teach or preach must line up with the word of God, God hates sin,
The meaning of this last word is much disputed, and amongst those suggested are that Mark was literally an interpreter who translated Peter's Aramaic into Greek, that Mark was Peter's «dragoman» (cf. Acts 13:5), and that Mark «interpreted» Peter's teaching by handing it on and explaining it (Papias speaks of himself as handing on what he had learnt from the elders «with my interpretations»).
Furthermore, the word «inspiration» means so many things today, this word leads to much confusion about the doctrine of inspiration.
What I have particularly in mind is that while there is much talk about taking Jesus as a key to the interpretation of human nature, as it is often phrased, or to the meaning of human life, or to the point of man's existential situation, there is a lamentable tendency to stop there and not to go on to talk about «the world» — by which Miss Emmet meant, I assume, the totality of things including physical nature; in other words the cosmos in its basic structure and its chief dynamic energy.
In the old days, they used to call this «holiness» or «sanctification» — both words we don't hear much because they lost some meaning by their misuse perhaps.
This means seeing the humanity in one another, justice, mercy, faithfulness, loving one another well, peace - making, even purity (a much misunderstood word) and mutual honour.
In other words, he was saying that when we use words to speak about God we change their meanings — so much so that opposites are no longer opposites.
We may think that the way we are accustomed to a word being used is the one and only correct usage, but then someone who uses the word with a much different meaning may think their use is the only correct usage.
I try to keep it out as much as possible, and I don't usually mention it in terms of «original word says etc...» but rather just explain what it means.
«This has taught me what these two words mean to Christians,» she explained, «and I like it so much that I play this record whenever I can.»
We must understand that the word believe means much more than a one - time reach to God in a desperate moment.
And that is much more useful than David simply providing a new definition for two reasons: he's seeking not necessarily to redefine, but to challenge already existing inconsistencies between our use of the words and how people actually function, AND because such terms are given their meaning collectively so redefining it alone would be meaningless because it wouldn't draw on people's real experience with their beliefs and views of the labels.
While such a suggestion may have theoretical value, it does not help much practically, since the word «god» continues to be widely used and to serve as more or less useful means of communicating religious ideas.
This meaning is where much of the confusion comes from, when using the words affective and effective.
U idiot bigot she brought up jesus in a discussion about santa and said «I mean jesus was a white man too but you know its like we have he was a historical figure I mean thats a verifiable fact...» I watched the whole interview too if u like her so much why did nt u listen to her «just because it makes you uncomfortable doesn't mean you can just change it...» she did say those words so edited or not she proposed a lie as the truth jesus was as white as any middle eastern person is
Jesus» baptism thus leads us to consider the meaning of «vocation,» a word that has lost much of its resonance through repeated use, both secular and churchly.
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin has made much of this in his widely read The Phenomenon of Man, but long before the publication of that volume C. Lloyd - Morgan in his Gifford lectures had indicated the significance of such «emergents», along with the «importance» (although this is not his, but Whitehead's, word) which they possess both in the ongoing movement of the world and as a way of our grasping of the meaning of that world in its on going movement.
is the brunt of the issues I have with the Christian traditionalists who do dare to make such Word out to be but a fettered disposition of parabolic venues meant to shape mankind's assimilative naturalisms ever so gently thru timely passing onwards subjective emotionalisms of tenaciously tenured rationalisms without much bitterly connotation - affronted derailments as seems the issues within our onwards marching histories trails of religious Lent.
But when you recall that the word «baptism» means «immersion into» or «overwhelmed by» or «fully identified with» then these passages become much more clear.
I say «truly catholic life,» and mean the stress to fall as much on the word «life» as on the word «catholic.»
While Churchill was a great orator, his words meant much back in those days but how soon does history tend to overlook such orations,,, For is it not a more wiser ambition to live freely among all religious persuasions and cling ever gently upon one's own independent literacies even though self - indulgence of the religious socialisms may give rises toward individualized dementia?
There are interpretations of Jesus life and the meanings of his words that are much more wonderful than what some churches insist are the only ones.
The Friar upbraids him for his adolescent hot blood and sternly admonishes him, using words whose message scarcely means much more than «haste makes waste» but whose musical phrasing immediately awakens the audience to the real meaning of the couple's tragedy:
The word «gospel» originally meant «good news,» and that's news about something that has happened as a result of which everything is different, including who we are, but it's much bigger than that.
The fact that you don't even know what the word «arab» means pretty much undermines everything you are trying to say.
«As much as we think we decide the meaning of a word,» she says, «language is a living thing, determined by those who use it.
It is much better, however, to recognize that the word «save» means deliver, and so when Peter writes that baptism saves us, he is saying that baptism delivers us.
As I hope is evident, none of the above meant to reduce or dispute the cultural significance, much less the real orientation towards peace of «A Common Word».
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