Once you fill the questionnaire you get a fair
idea of the kind of person you are searching for and who you can be comfortable with.
Additionally, when you find someone that you feel attracted to and decide to arrange a meeting, you will have a brief
history of the kind of person that he or she is.
I start by meeting the actors and thanks to that, I can get an
idea of the kind of person they are and the kind of characters they will be.
I find that although
many of these kinds of people may hide the truth of themselves to the outside world, there is a whole lot of honesty when communicating with them personally.
A key developmental task of adolescence is the formation of an identity — a
sense of the kind of person you are and the kind of person you want to be.
Pew found that 39 percent of Protestant voters «can't see [themselves] giving Trump a chance
because of the kind of person he has shown himself to be.»
Lying at the base of it is the adoption of «image advertising» in the promotion of religious faith, the technique by which one paints for the customer «a total
picture of the kind of person he would like to be and then makes him believe your product is a necessary part of that picture.»
And he also knew that the business he's starting, a service called Diggen to allow Web retailers to better target shoppers, was hardly about to inflame the
passions of the kinds of people who donate money on sites like Kickstarter.
Efforts to make the conference inclusive - it was free and anyone could register - materialised in a big
jamboree of all kinds of people interested in urban affairs (as well as complaints about long queues).
Based on these dimensions — they are also known as OCEAN, an acronym for openness, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, neuroticism — we can make a relatively accurate assessment
of the kind of person in front of us.
In this extract from Bill Hybels» new book Holy Discontent, Hybels explains how Moses and Popeye are great examples
of the kind of people God is looking for.
While conducting research on inner - city churches I've had the privilege of meeting many
of the kinds of people Wallis exalts, and they are making a notable impact.
In this regard, when we lift up before the congregation the lives of the saints who gave themselves for others and when we encourage service to those in need around us (e.g., the works of mercy) we are contributing to the
formation of the kind of people on whom the just war tradition as a form of discipleship depends.
Although he quotes his actual words seldom if ever, evidence is not lacking that he had a clear impression
of the kind of person Jesus was.
With regard to interfaith encounter, Merton gives us, once again, not a systematic discussion but a
sketch of the kind of person able to take part in such encounter with the necessary quality of engagement.