Sentences with phrase «now take her for»

Many of the structures and institutions he helped pioneer more than a century ago — in - house sales teams; geographic sales territories; sales conferences; quotas; training academies — we now take for granted.
As users of technology, we now take it for granted that a PC is going to be where we need it to be.
What it really did, in Laozian terms, was generate an entirely new world, one in which we now take for granted that personal computers should always be by our side.
They cure diseases that killed our forebears in droves, and enable any number of medical procedures and treatments that we now take for granted.
In the process, she learned a ton about government, got a nice resume item, and now takes it for granted that she can run for any office she wants (she is leaning towards Prime Minister).
The trick is that members must learn to function and observe as if they were outsiders so that they see afresh the myriad matters about the congregation that they now take for granted.
The chapter divisions that we now take for granted in the Bible were the work of Stephen Langton in the 13th century; the verse divisions originated with the printer Robert Stephanus in 1551.
Sanitation and other forms of preventive medicine are certainly significant developments which many now take for granted.
As You know, I have broken a covenant with You and my wife, and have now taken another for my wife.
Because public opinion supporting certain kinds of abortion is close to unanimous; it was formed before the 1973 Supreme Court decision; and the majority that have come of sexual age since that year now take for granted that fertility decisions are to be made only by the individuals involved.
The place of the Negro in baseball is now taken for granted.
More and more adults now take it for different reasons, and there is no harm in taking your own milk.
Look for him to ignore targeting and grassroots outreach in favor of ginning up coverage on cable news, and despite the RNC's pledge to spend heavily on digital advertising between now and November, his campaign won't take advantage most of the online options that internet political professionals now take for granted.
And because of Hillary Clinton, my daughters and all our sons and daughters now take for granted that a woman can be president of the United States.
Left to his own devices, as he makes clear in his diary entry for 12 October 1980, he would have stood for the leadership in October that year when Callaghan resigned in a deliberate attempt to pre-empt the decision of Labour's party conference to have the wider franchise for electing the Leader that all major parties now take for granted.
Realizing that his explanation may only be deepening the mystery of time, Rovelli says that much of the knowledge that we now take for granted was once considered equally perplexing.
Mr. Fusion aside, this 1989 time - traveling comedy was spot - on about many devices that we now take for granted
Globalization, as manifested in international collaboration on «big science» projects, is now taken for granted.
Clinicians and researchers have raised ethical questions about the transplant, as well as concerns about whether Dinoire was stable enough to give informed consent for the procedure — which dips into uncharted issues involving the relationship between the face and personal identity — and for the regimen of immunosuppressive drugs she must now take for the rest of her life.
These findings have influenced child - rearing practices ever since, and it is now taken for granted that the more time a parent talks to an infant, the better.
«It's amazing that something we now take for granted, cooking, was such a transformational technology which gave us the big brains that have made us the only species to study ourselves and to generate knowledge that transcends what was observed firsthand; to tamper with itself, fixing imperfections with the likes of glasses, implants and surgery and thus changing the odds of natural selection; and to modify its environment so extensively (for better and for worse), extending its habitat to improbable locations.»
That's a post for another day, but looking back to some blog entries in the past (like this one), moving did not always come so naturally to me, yet now I take it for granted.
During my time on Tomorrows World I had the enviable task of previewing the kind of technology we now take for granted, such as the mobile phone, the digital camera and the sat nav.
OK, maybe you hadn't heard of Steve Jobs back in the 80s and 90s, when he was busy inventing all of those Apple devices, integrated software, and content that you now take for granted — the Mac, the iPod, iPod Touch, iPhone, iPad, iTunes, the App Store... He also helped to build Apple stores, the most successful and innovative retail enterprise on the planet, helped save the music industry, and even had a hand in such classics as «Toy Story» as CEO of Pixar.
What made my education complete was the academic support I received at home — support that Klein now takes for granted, discounting the enormous contribution his parents made to his cognitive strengths.
While these are features that we now take for granted, they're still a long way away from the more affordable cars of Peru.
in the rain at Spa in 1966 and being trapped in his fuel - dripping BRM for about thirty minutes, Stewart began lobbying for safer cars and tracks, leading driver boycotts, and compelling improvements that we now take for granted.
In the days before the electronic aids we now take for granted, Porsche's desire to control the 911s handling and simultaneously increase its performance was justified.
There are a lot of things we now take for granted in our shiny, modern cars.
The car ushered in many technologies that we now take for granted.
The company was one of the first to standardize many one - time luxury features we now take for granted.
The suspension is part of a $ 3,860 TRD Sport Extra Value Package that also includes alloy wheels and a hood scoop as well as a long list of features such as intermittent wipers, cruise control, storage consoles, power wing mirrors, lumbar - support seats, a rearview camera and so on that we now take for granted even in economy hatchbacks.
If you'd told me even 20 years ago that I'd be working in a car on internet based platforms I'd have suspected you of insanity or a bad case of science fiction addiction yet now we take it for granted.
It shows how far we've come, how much that seemed impossible five years ago is now taken for granted, and how far we hope to go in the future.
It was not investment managers or brokers that discovered prudent portfolio management techniques we now take for granted, but a small group of inquisitive mathematicians with enough stamina to charge against them.
The earliest studies funded by the Foundation focused on the unique protein requirements of cats, knowledge we now take for granted, but at the time little was known about the unique dietary needs of cats.
Things we now take for granted, like websites that display our organizations» services and adoptable pets, pet - search databases such as Petfinder.com and Adopt-a-Pet.com, more robust and easy to use animal sheltering software solutions, and the rise of... Learn More
Animal Crossing: Wild World brought many essential features that are now taken for granted in the series like flower cross-breeding, villager photos, character hats and accessories, and placing patterns on the ground.
The mod's latest update — version 1.4 — comes with a respectable number of nips, tucks and adjustments to the original idea and, having just now taken it for a whirl, Dark Souls finally feels at home with mouse and keyboard support.
Call of Duty 4 was the first game to pull off the Hollywood - worthy action sequences you and me now take for granted.
British born, international artist, Gavin Turk has pioneered many forms of contemporary British sculpture now taken for granted, including the painted bronze, the waxwork, the recycled art - historical icon and the use of rubbish in art.
The idea of late style wasn't applied to the visual arts until late that century, but it rapidly gained ground to the extent that most of us now take it for granted that the raw and the fragmentary are preferable to the classically polished, that Michelangelo's late, primal Slaves are more moving than the slick, early David, that Goya's nightmarish Black Paintings, created when he was in his seventies and isolated by deafness, are incomparably greater than his more finished early works.
Through his progressive ideas and artworks Paik dared to imagine a future where the technological and playful innovations that we now take for granted might exist.
He has pioneered many forms of contemporary British sculpture now taken for granted, including the painted bronze, the waxwork, the recycled art - historical icon and the use of rubbish in art.
 How many of the things your children now take for granted would have seemed like magic to you back then?
We now take for granted Warhol's appropriation, which was really quite shocking for the period; at one point he cut the head off an image of Jackie Kennedy that became a work of art, and then resulted in a lawsuit.
Like I say this level of appropriation is something that we now take for granted; but at the time it was quite a revolutionary act.
These were the origins of the institutional structures that we now take for granted in contemporary science journals, conferences, and peer review, so that claims could be reported clearly and subject to rigorous scrutiny.
Mr. Monckton is, I have little doubt just as much of an atheist regarding Hinduism or Islam as I am, recognizing that they are far from proven, in direct contradiction with all sorts of matters of fact and moral principles that we now take for granted, and hence that it is not reasonable to accord them any particular degree of plausible belief.
This is because these things are now taken for granted.
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