In - person speeches are better because give the opportunity to observe tone of voice, speed, pitch, and other
nuances of live speakers.
The enormous variety in the literature notwithstanding, many of the subtleties and
nuances of the lives of local churches remained unaccounted for, he felt.
Leah blogs at Leah's Thoughts, where she writes about motherhood and the everyday
nuances of life.
I'm artsy, into the mystical and
the nuances of life and human behavior.
Documentarian Frederick Wiseman has been noted for his ability to capture
the nuances of life in American institutions such as prisons, hospitals, welfare offices, and high schools.
I enjoy this profession immensely - it allows me to use my knowledge of the island and
the nuances of living in various areas and communities to fulfill my clients» wishes.»
In this interview excerpted from her eponymous Phaidon's monograph, the celebrated South African portraitist discusses the strange
nuances of life as an artist with her long time friend Barbara Bloom.
LS: I'm in love with Color Field painting and Hard - edge abstraction, and I make paintings from a place where post-painterly methodologies embrace
the nuances of lived experiences.
From there you would also need to be well trained on
the nuances of life insurance underwriting practices and how they would apply to dozens of different insurance carriers.
However, this doesn't mean that the average, intelligent person will easily understand all
the nuances of a life insurance policy at face value, nor will he or she know how to go about choosing the right plan for their budget and needs.
Big on aerobic exercise, he frequently takes part in race walking and endurance walking tournaments, chronicling his experiences, discussing his treatment decisions, and sharing
the nuances of living with asthma in general.
With years of experience practicing in medical settings, I am familiar with a wide range of medical diagnoses and
the nuances of living with them day - to - day.
Not exact matches
The clients I know who have succeeded on the platform usually devote a significant amount
of time and resources to properly listing their products, understanding the
nuances of the company's fulfillment and other services, participating in campaigns that have questionable profitability, analyzing reams
of data that the service spits out in order to make adjustments to its prices and branding and working hard to
live up to Amazon's stringent customer service guidelines.
The idea over time, though, is to perfect all those specific measures and to have users add every possible
nuance of an American's
life so that the tool gets easier and easier for people to use.
And it also deepened our degree
of empathy, because we were able to see and experience daily some
of the more
nuanced aspects
of living with diabetes that would have been more difficult to glean during market research.
Look for the right results
life coach for you by understanding what you want to achieve; know the
nuances of each communication style, coaching trait and different
life coaching specialties.
I really appreciate your
nuanced view
of not just maximizing returns but taking into consideration stress and quality
of life!!
As Tom Bissell, a journalist, former Salon writer and lifelong gamer, explains in his new book, «Extra
Lives: Why Video Games Matter,» the graphics, storytelling and interactivity
of gaming have all made tremendous leaps forward in recent years, allowing players to intermingle with
nuanced, fleshed - out digital characters in near - photo - realistic environments.
But some powerful statistics she encountered motivated her to figure out a way to balance motherhood while
living out her passion to help people understand the complexities and
nuances of the Social Security system.
They have entire institutional teams at their disposal, dive deep into the
nuances and complexities
of the market, and spend every waking moment
of their
lives thinking about how to get more from their investments.
the problem is that ppl read the bible thats been translated, if you realy want to know what was said youll need to study hebrew... every letter has a meaning... every word isnt a perfect fit for english,, theres
nuances and cultural differences that youll find,,, its a whole new thing to go back and look at the bible through hebrew eyes,,, they arent required to look like us,,, were supposed to look more like them,,, yashua was a jew,,,, all the apostles were jews, yashua was sent to the lost sheep
of the house
of israel, not the gentiles, paul took it to the gentiles, and he never stopped being and
living as a jew, the laws are very viable today, but they do nt give salvation, thats what yashua did...
She visited the United Stated once, a long time ago and that has given her all the insight see needs to form opinions about every
nuance of American
life.
The document criticizes «doctrinal or disciplinary security,» «an obsession with the law,» «punctilious concern for... doctrine,» «dogmatism,» «hiding behind rules and regulations,» and «a rigid resistance to change,» while reprimanding those who «give excessive importance to certain rules,» overemphasize «ecclesial rules,» believe that «doctrine... is a closed system,» «feel superior to others because they observe certain rules,» have «an answer for every question,» wish to «exercise a strict supervision over others»
lives,» «long for a monolithic body
of doctrine guarded by all and leaving no room for
nuance,» believe that «we give glory to God... simply by following certain ethical norms,» and «look down on others like heartless judges, lording it over them and always trying to teach them lessons.»
In both regards, the procreative and unitive ends properly sought in our sexual
lives are complex rather than simple, admitting
of nuance and degree.
I was surprised to see such a dismissive statement from Keller, who has devoted so much
of his
life to carefully addressing the questions
of skeptics with
nuance and respect, and who has a generally open attitude toward doubt.
This requires a willing suspension
of disbelief in our own language; knowledge and judgment and
nuance, everything that makes the tongue a
living spirit, must give way for a labored impossibility.
In the past the Church has appeared to many Catholics as an absolutely monolithic structure, a system
of doctrine and
life which had to be either accepted or rejected as a whole, without degrees or
nuances of importance in its various components.
While historians have welcomed Appleby's
nuanced study
of how the War for Independence altered the
lives of ordinary Americans (Inheriting the Revolution: The First Generation
of Americans), an even broader and more appreciative audience has made David McCullough's biography
of John Adams a run away best seller.
Admittedly, the nervous
nuancing is excessive and the statement is anything but a clarion trumpet call for battle on behalf
of the culture
of life, but «Standing for the Unborn» should be welcomed as an exercise in Jesuit catch - up and a promising advance in the Jesuit - Catholic ecumenical dialogue.
It is a small book, and the supporting sociological evidence is mainly referenced in the footnotes, but Greeley does propose evidence that, among other things, Catholics have, compared to non-Catholics, a significantly higher appreciation
of the arts and high culture; they have more satisfaction and fun in sex; they better understand the uses
of leisure; they have a deeper and more stable relationship to family and community; they have a greater respect for the
life of the mind, with educational achievements reflecting that respect; and they understand the
nuanced connections between freedom and authority.
It is these little
nuances with
life that points to something that science and atheist can not fully explain no more than the Pastor
of the local church, after a storm, looks upon his town and has to field questions
of «why my house» while at the same time having to field «Thank the Lord my house was spared.»
This photograph vividly portrays Ford's seriousness
of purpose, including stern attention to intricacies
of argument and to the
nuance of textual details, and most
of all captures the total concentration
of intellectual energy and engagement with which Lewis Ford has unfailingly, throughout a long and distinguished career, approached the
life of philosophical reflection.
The situation in Europe, including Britain, is more
nuanced than that in North America, largely because Europe's Muslim populations have a longer and more established social and political history in nations where Muslims (
of the theological left, right and center) are represented by sophisticated networks
of» mosques and political NGOs that defend the rights
of Muslims and shape their participation in civic
life, including the introduction
of Islamic law for civil cases.
The resulting portrait
of religious
life in these neighborhoods is rich and
nuanced.
Because
of the narrowness and perishability
of the route
of occasions comprising our own
lives, we command no secure vision
of the universal pattern in its
nuance, intensity and massiveness.
Due acknowledgment
of others» work is a way
of indicating who are the necessary members
of the conversation I am participating in to acquire the same kinds
of nuanced judgments that I find exhibited in their
lives.
Despite
living in this apartment for over a year, I'm still discovering the
nuances of cooking with my beautiful vintage Wedgewood stove.
It's where they learned the
nuances of the game and
life lessons like course etiquette, integrity and sportsmanship.
Permission to tune into one's self for guidance, to trust what's there and to follow it — not only
living from the head and what is «right», but from the heart and head in balance, comfortable with the
nuances and the many interpretations the moments
of our
lives bring.
Emotional intelligence is being able to recognize a wide range
of nuanced emotions, and recognizing them, being able to regulate them and put them in perspective in a way that helps the individual move through
life more easily.
One possible problem with Basic Income Guarantee proposals / models is that the theoretical goal
of «an income you can
live on» produces sharply different answers depending on «
live on where»
nuance of...
And most folk find a straightforward appeal more appealing than the
nuance of real
life.
As much as the renewal
of mayoral control looks like a battle between city - based Democrats who back de Blasio and Long Island and rural Republicans who oppose him, it is city legislators whose constituents
live within the system and who want to have a
nuanced discussion about reforming it.
«She is an adult woman, she is a medical doctor; she hasn't
lived here for some time so she doesn't even know the
nuances of the parties and so on but she has the right to decide which way she wants to go,» Mrs Rawlings, who is also the founder
of the National Democratic Party (NDP) told StarrFMonline.com.
The advent
of epigenetics offers a new twist and perhaps an opportunity to understand with more
nuance how nature and nurture combine to shape the society we
live in today and hope to
live in tomorrow.
Despite the varied and often
nuanced behaviors they can exhibit, invertebrates are sometimes regarded as
life's second string, a mindless and unfeeling band
of alien critters.
Thus, «giant chunks
of space debris clobbering the planet and wiping out
life on Earth has undeniably broad appeal,» Meltzer says, whereas «no one in Hollywood makes movies» about more
nuanced explanations, such as Clovis points disappearing because early Americans turned to other forms
of stone tool technology as the large mammals they were hunting went extinct as a result
of the changing climate or hunting pressure.
And while Gould's comment about replaying the tape
of life was mainly a nod to the large amount
of randomness inherent in evolution's path, this study suggests a more
nuanced reason that the playback would appear different.
His understanding
of religious experience is a
nuanced one, honed from years
of living as an exiled Hasidic Jew and from studies under a religious philosopher.
Understanding the cultural
nuances of a language requires extensive ongoing contact with its speakers, and for that reason Kramsch doubts that anyone could ever
live in more than four or five languages.