Sentences with phrase «n't come to terms»

I had my heart set on them and couldn't come to terms with giving them up when our house burned down.
The courts decide the terms of the separation agreement if the spouses can't come to terms.
She should have discussed the situation with a colleague if she couldn't come to terms with it herself, And, she took income away from the client by convincing her she shouldn't contract with her son.
If you're leaving your current job because you can't come to terms on the salary you think your position warrants, explain that you're seeking an increase in responsibility and that the job listing would make use of all of your qualifications in addition to extra duties you want to take on.
Experienced drivers, even if they still haven't come to terms with how fragile and fleeting life is, are more cautious behind the wheel.
Interactivity — even simple audio and video — is something that the vast majority of law sites haven't come to terms with yet, tending to regard anything more elaborate than Times New Roman as frippery or lèse majesté.
By Craig Lindberg Perhaps Dana Nuccitelli and others can't come to terms with the death of the AGW hypothesis because Climate Change hasn't been properly eulogized.
An American Express spokesman says the two companies have had a good relationship, but couldn't come to terms on a new agreement.
Is it a smart practice to sell titles that haven't been released yet when there is no surety that they'll ever be able to fulfill those orders if they can't come to terms with Hachette?
I would have to say this car has more European character, for better or for worse, than most euro imports, but there is nothing about it that is so different that you can't come to terms with it.
Anyone who can't come to terms with spending the additional $ 41,300 over M - B's own SL63 Roadster with the AMG Performance package for a piddling 6 horsepower gain is missing the point entirely.
Not only did the gearbox hate the cold, the suspension couldn't come to terms with the winter - ravaged pavement.
Teachers voted overwhelmingly to authorize the first strike in 25 years if the city and the union can't come to terms this summer.
Obsessed with her own polished image, it seems Mona just couldn't come to terms with her tussle - haired daughter, whereas Darian's handsome charm fulfilled her parental expectations.
Liam Neeson still hasn't come to terms with his wife's death five years ago.
Rupert Grint (Ron) is definitely doing well in a comedic role, but he's the one role I can't come to terms with.
«I can't come to terms with it, because I loved Woody and had a wonderful time with him.
However, the overriding theme is still very much the importance of family — an idea punctuated by the addition of Ingrid's also - spy parents (played by, in an odd but inspired pairing, Ricardo Montalban and Holland Taylor), who still haven't come to terms with her marriage to Gregorio.
I can't come to terms with it, because I loved Woody and had a wonderful time with him,» The Guardian quoted Caine as saying.
Harry himself remained stuck in the whiny, adolescent act two of his story, storming away from the Order of the Phoenix because he can't come to terms with being important.
But she didn't come to terms with her sexual orientation until her 20s, when she found herself in love.
Hood wanted to bring his new technologies to market, but he and the universities he worked at couldn't come to terms.
After the bill passed, Cuomo said there were «some things we couldn't come to terms with.»
Too much, he said, is left to be negotiated with the unions — and with no Plan B if the parties don't come to terms.
«I'm committed to it, it's a shame the mayor can't come to terms with the fact that he was late on body cameras, that's why he's playing catch - up.
Comcast Corp. dropped the YES Network, home of the New York Yankees and Brooklyn Nets, after the two sides couldn't come to terms over a new carriage agreement.
Maria Caulfield, a Brexit - supporting Conservative MP who now sits on the Exiting the EU Select Committee, said: «Tony Blair broke his own promise of a referendum on the EU, encouraged uncontrolled immigration and now can't come to terms with the decision of the people of the UK to leave.»
Though Pelosi and other House Democrats have made it clear that they're angry with the Senate, they're also frustrated with the president, upset that he hasn't come to terms with the problems of getting legislation through the upper chamber — or done enough to overcome them.
Regardless of Wenger and other people defending the decision to leave out our record signing and top scorer I still can't come to terms with the decision to do it.
The goal scorer himself, playing on the Left - Wing, was the chief architect in Arsenal finding that cutting edge, which their opposition, on the day, couldn't come to terms with.
«We couldn't come to terms with him,» says Sanford, «but we're not at all hungry for name bowlers.»
Can't come to terms with the fact that Tottenham might actually win the league this season.
It's been a long, hot summer, yet I can't come to terms we are in August of 2014!
As a Texan who grew up in a hunting culture, own a large collection of non-military firearms, and do my own gunsmithing, I still can't come to terms with the N.R.A..
If nothing else, religion is nothing more than a coping mechanism for those who fear death so much that they can't come to terms with the possibility that we are simply finite creatures who are not meant to exist for eternity.
People just can't come to terms with the fact that their existence is in fact quite meaningless in our infinite universe — Cosmologically speaking.
God didn't come to terms with human sin.
They can't come to terms with the idea that there may actually be nothing after we die so they latch on to a belief that gives them comfort... belief in an afterlife, eternity or any version of «god» is nothing more than a coping mechanism for those who can't accept that we are in fact finite creatures that are born, live, and die and are not meant or destined to exist for eternity.
What our political culture hasn't come to terms with is that the proliferation of right - of - center broadcasting has coincided with (probably) a smaller percentage of Americans (and especially younger Americans) hearing conservative opinions at length, in language they understand.
On Friday, rumors began to spread that T - Mobile parent Deutsche Telekom AG and Sprint majority shareholder SoftBank couldn't come to terms on how much control each would receive per the terms of the deal.
DirecTV dropped The Weather Channel from the screens of its roughly 20 million customers early Tuesday morning after the two couldn't come to terms on carriage fees.
While the Bay Area has a reputation for being the startup hub of America — and there are plenty of valid reasons for that reputation — many founders don't come to terms with the negative realities of fundraising in the Bay Area when you don't live there.
If you're flying American @American (aal) or Delta (dal), you're also in for a new headache: The two airlines couldn't come to terms on an agreement for rebooking, so this is the first summer where if you have a delay on one airline's flights, you can't ask to be rebooked on the other airline.
(YouTube TV still has not come to terms with Viacom, which owns networks such as MTV and Comedy Central.)
At least a couple of MLSs have not come to terms with Zillow Group, however: Sandicor, which has around 18,000 members, and Cary, North Carolina - based Triangle MLS, which has more than 8,000 members.
Hillary simply can not come to terms with it.
If things go wrong, the pregnancy might not come to term,...
The investment comes after Target and Casper could not come to terms on an outright acquisition after Target offered to buy the startup for $ 1 billion.
Yet, after three years of negotiations, the two sides still have not come to terms.
The church still can not come to terms with the fact that s3x is a basic human need, like food, water, and air.
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