Sentences with phrase «nocks in»

Made from strong carbon and featuring arrow nocks in a half - moon shape and arrow vanes in blue and white, these arrows are attractive and effective.
-- Albert Jay Nock in Isaiah's Job
See also the review by A. D. Nock in Anglican Theological Review, April.
I am here 4 my heart desire people say nigerias are scam that why they refuse to give attention to the real people in need of a life partner, it is what the heart wants that what it takes i want to meet my heart desire over here i am a talented guy i would like to put my contact here for anyone that feels the heart nock in me +2348140270490

Not exact matches

I am sure the Gunners will not take victory over The Red and Whites for granted as The R&W are a very strong team of the French League I and thats why their in the nock - out stage of the CL.
He made some great saves but also made some bad desision as well lucky not to be punished and nothing in the penalty shoot out no saves or close to a save, don't think I'm nocking him im not just saying as it is.
The local Labour party in Can nock Chase has set up a «Bye Bye Burley» campaign, asking for # 10 to help kick out the MP, who relies on a majority of just 3,195.
The nocks are carved into the shaft, which is approximately 0.313 of an inch in diameter.
It comes complete with replaceable and adjustable field points and nocks, so you won't run out, even in the event of a break.
In fact, in a 2006 study of 89 hospitalized adolescents who engaged in cutting and related forms of nonsuicidal self - injury, Harvard psychologist Matthew Nock and his colleagues found that 48 percent did not meet criteria for BPIn fact, in a 2006 study of 89 hospitalized adolescents who engaged in cutting and related forms of nonsuicidal self - injury, Harvard psychologist Matthew Nock and his colleagues found that 48 percent did not meet criteria for BPin a 2006 study of 89 hospitalized adolescents who engaged in cutting and related forms of nonsuicidal self - injury, Harvard psychologist Matthew Nock and his colleagues found that 48 percent did not meet criteria for BPin cutting and related forms of nonsuicidal self - injury, Harvard psychologist Matthew Nock and his colleagues found that 48 percent did not meet criteria for BPD.
Matthew Nock, a clinical psychologist at Harvard who studies suicide and self - injury in adolescents and adults.
«It is striking that nearly 50 % of the soldiers who attempted suicide made their first attempt before joining the Army, as history of suicide attempts is asked about in recruitment interviews and applicants who report such a history typically are excluded from service,» said Matthew Nock, Professor of Psychology at Harvard University and lead author of this report on soldier suicidality.
Lifetime and 12 - month nonsuicidal self - injury and academic performance in college freshmen Kiekens G, Claes L, Demyttenaere K, Auerbach RP, Green JG, Kessler RC, Mortier P, Nock MK, Bruffaerts R. Suicide & Life - Threatening Behavior.
Examining the course of suicidal and nonsuicidal self - injurious thoughts and behaviors in outpatient and inpatient adolescents Glenn CR, Lanzillo EC, Esposito EC, Santee AC, Nock MK, Auerbach RP.
As a result you can now hear the nocking and let me in allowing me to tell you to open the window and let the air in.
Beginning in the winter of 1952, Detective Robert Nock (Rory Kinnear) investigates a burglary at the residence of mathematician and cryptologist Alan Turing (Benedict Cumberbatch).
Turing ends up being suspiciously cagey about the matter, and Nock begins to look deeper into the incident, finding that the man was involved in some kind of government operation during World War II, leading him to believe Turing to be a spy.
Called in for questioning, Turing tells Nock a candid story about his involvement in breaking the Nazi's Enigma code during the war.
Tyldum unfussily frames Graham Moore's script between Turing's arrest in Manchester in 1951, where an interview with Detective Robert Nock (a fine Rory Kinnear) leads us back to the mathematician's arrival at Bletchley Park in 1939.
When the narrative eventually folds back on this pronouncement, it transpires that he is speaking to the by - the - book Manchester police detective Nock (Rory Kinnear), whose investigation of a burglary at Turing's home has led to the mathematician being charged with «gross indecency,» a euphemism for homosexual acts that were punishable by imprisonment until the relevant 1885 law was repealed in 1967.
By the time it's revealed that Nock is the listener, and that the story is being «seen» from his perspective, he has begun to regret his part in Turing's downfall.
Probably Archery is our ridiculous archery game where you have control over the shoulder, elbow and wrist joints in your two arms and need to manipulate them to grab an arrow, nock it, aim and fire at all sorts of stuff from simple targets, to charging berserkers or a hangman's rope.
Matthew K. Nock and Alan E Kazdin, 8220; Randomized Controlled Trial of a Brief Intervention for Increasing Participation in Parent Management Training, 8221; Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 73 (2005): 8728211; 79.
Engagement Matthew Nock and Alan Kazdin administered a Participant Enhancement Intervention (PEI) to parents of oppositional, aggressive, antisocial children, giving each parent eight sessions with a therapist employing PEI, which is designed to «increase parents» motivation to participate in treatment and to increase attendance and adherence to treatment.»
Nevertheless, because studies on the temporal relations between conduct problems and depression have produced mixed results, with some findings suggesting that CD precedes depression (e.g., Biederman et al. 1995; Nock et al. 2006), and other findings suggesting that depression precedes CD (e.g., Kovacs et al. 1988), the relation between the two constructs is assumed to be reciprocal in the model (illustrated by a double - headed arrow in Fig. 1).
Seven or more of 10 empirical studies in the November 2000 issue of the APA journal Developmental Psychology likewise would end up in Professor Nock's dustbin.
Moreover, the studies that meet or come close to meeting even Professor Nock's tendentious standards find at least equal parenting skills and child development outcomes in all of the areas of mental health and social and cognitive development with which the courts might reasonably be concerned.
Professor Nock also concedes in the Appendix that the Golombok, Tasker and Murray (1997) study «is an innovative project with some significant strengths,» one which «relied on very good measures of family functioning and psychological development, and in which «overall, the execution of the study was good.»
Apparently unaware of the many findings of statistically significant differences, Professor Nock (para. 104) argues that because the samples in various studies were small, researchers ought to increase their probability of rejecting the null hypothesis from.05 to.10.
Likewise, Professor Nock reluctantly acknowledges methodological strengths in studies by Flaks, Fisher, Masterpasqua and Joseph (1995)(Page 1582 - 1583) and by Green, Mandel, Hotvedt, Gray, and Smith (1986)(Page 1581 - 1582).
By Professor Nock's standard, we would throw out a good portion of research in medicine that uses inferential statistics (e.g., all of those that conduct t - tests or chi - square tests for treatment effects on small non-probability samples).
Take, for example, the Nov - Dec 2000 issue of Child Development, in which at least 10 of the 15 empirical studies published employ one or another of the methodological features that Nock rejects as «fatal flaws.»
Parents» childhood SES (Occupational Prestige Scale; Nock & Rossi, 1979) was determined using the occupational prestige of their parents (i.e., the grandparents of the children of this sample) as recorded during a phone interview in the mid-1980s.
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