Sentences with phrase «of anything suggests»

There are far more complex emotions swirling around in Your Sister's Sister than the final act of characters moping around and not doing much of anything suggests.
Between this fence and the river the country was varied, despite the lack of anything suggesting a mountain.

Not exact matches

That «suggests that a long - term character change could be afoot, which makes me suspicious of anything more than a bounce for now,» he added in comments to CNBC.
And in terms of reputation, the anything - goes strategy seemingly suggested by some idealists is likely to be fatal to just about any charity.
His initial review of the matter, Reilly tells Fortune, suggests «it'd be impossible to prove that it had anything to do with union activity.»
In other sessions, he explains the results of our Bod Pod tests, suggesting that a balanced approach to eating and exercise that will reduce body fat percentages much more effectively than «running a marathon and eating anything you like.»
«Our research suggests that sampling drives people to want more of anything that's rewarding,» Nowlis, a marketing professor, noted in the Journal of Marketing Research.
No one is suggesting getting sloshed is good for much of anything other than causing embarrassment and a headache, nor should your office drinking reach Don Draper levels of consistency.
His close friend Tom McGuane suggested he try a full - length work of fiction since Harrison «could no longer do anything to avoid it.»
Although faux fur is okay, St. Michael suggests staying away from anything that is made of real animal fur.
If there's an explicit mention of buying links or anything that suggests the agency pays for links, run away.
And the election of Donald Trump in the U.S. hasn't dented that support — if anything, this survey suggests that the new U.S. leader's position actually makes Canadians more inclined to support clean energy here at home.»
These developments suggest a growing probability that, if anything is to come out of tomorrow, it will be an internal agreement from OPEC that would then be presented to non - members, requiring their participation
Remarks from governor Stephen Poloz — for example, during comments at a recent meeting of the International Monetary Fund in Washington and following the October rate announcement, which held the overnight rate steady at one per cent — suggest that the path forward is anything but predetermined.
No one has suggested anything of the sort, unless of course asking people to be aware of their privilege, listening to those who don't have it, and doing what they can to address it in their daily lives (see Mary Anne's comment for a beautiful illustration of how even small gestures make a difference) is something that comes «at personal cost.»
Unfortunately for all of us, the data from the historical record suggest that it is unlikely to be true at anything like todayâ $ ™ s marginal tax rates.
There is a complete void of anything about Bud Light beer; nothing at all to suggest the beer is distinctive in any way.
None of the comments above suggests anything about market timing.
We're going to let you in on a little secret: Investors focused on economic growth are wasting their time... If anything, the evidence suggests a negative correlation between equity returns and GDP growth... It may be that the best prices can be had in times of low economic growth, whereas we tend to overpay in a growing economy.
I would suggest you find a ounce of evidence that Pope Francis is preaching anything that resembles Marxism.
He said that the latest study (Professor Jordan Grafman, from the US National Inst - itute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke in Bethesda,) suggests the brain is inherently sensitive to believing in almost anything if there are grounds for doing so, but when there is a mystery about something, the same neural machinery is co-opted in the formulation of religious belief.
Anything along the lines of a phrase like «when God closes a door, He opens a window,» may be intended for encouragement, but I would suggest that it lacks the depth people actually need in those desperate moments when everything feels like a setback.
For example, MNAY Gospels were suppressed, including some with references to Christ being Gay and similar radical concepts that would cause todays Church to throw a Pogrom on anyone even SUGGESTING he was anything other than the blue eyed Puritanical Caucasian they are so fond of promoting.
Without the brain, anything like a soul would have no memory, no «mind», no comprehension, and no way to interact with anything in a way that would suggest a «supernatural» or even extra-dimensional creature who wants a bit of selfish pleasure out of it.
By the way I never said anything to suggest I thought the victims on AI - DS were «immoral, sinful people» you're projecting your opinon of christians on my words.
We are not told anything about what sorts of sexual attractions Jesus did or did not have, which suggests to me that perhaps Jesus (and / or those who recorded some of his words for us) either didn't consider the matter very important or else figured it was non of our damn business...
If you think these ideas are outdated or irrelevant, I suggest you take a look at the damage that has been wrought on society by rampant divorce, abortion, our of wedlock pregnancy, falling birth rates, and a general view that life is NOT sacred, family is NOT important, and that children are more a burden to be avoided than anything.
Unlike you, I don't have to ask anyone anything to know what a smart person thinks, because there is plenty of objective evidence suggesting I am one.
These rather general remarks do not prove anything, of course; they only suggest one must live in an Aristotelian world to draw genetic successiveness so close to physical time as to call both time.
I can't really suggest anything because I don't know much about the situation in particular but I can say they must not fully understand the doctrine of forgiveness and their duty as parents.
Rather than aristocratic images of noble birth, we are presented with a laborer's wife, from a poor village, the status of which — even among Jews — is suggested by the phrase, «Can anything good come out of Nazareth?»
But it's telling that the first comment from, you, Steve, when David suggests not even cracking down on, but simply not being apethetic to abuse of people in churches, is that there is no utopia, so just accept it and don't bother trying to change anything.
And there isn't anything in any of those books that would suggest that my love for my wife is anything other than godly.
Although I dunk that Gewirth's proposal is subject to the criticism of nonteleological ethics I suggested summarily near the outset, anything approaching a decisive resolution of this issue in favor of teleological ethics will require nothing less than a more or less complete case for a metaphysical proposal.
If you are trying to suggest the infallibility of anything found in a modern bible, just say so.
One article suggesting that evolution would take 10 - 15x longer than the existence of the universe does not really * prove * anything.
The dramatically higher incidence among homosexuals of suicide, psychological disorder, and sexually related disease (frequently lethal) suggests that homosexuality is anything but gay.
To deny that would seem to suggest that the actual entity need not be extensive at all, or that it might float loose from its locus in time and space, or that it might expand or contract, and it has never occurred to me to affirm anything of that sort.
The Bible, and the community of faith which produced it, was concerned with faith in one living God, unlike anything ever known to the world — unlike anything ever suggested before, during or since; and, they were interested in how faith in this one living God was able to transform the lives of individuals and the world and to save both from destruction.
Like Matthew, Luke says «lost its taste» instead of Mark's «lost its saltness,» suggesting that the ordinary use of salt for seasoning is in mind; but instead of Matthew's «It is no longer good for anything except to be thrown out and trodden under foot» Luke has «It is fit neither for the land nor for the dunghill; men throw it away.»
This is just one example that show the low caliber of popular atheistic arguments, as some here suggest that «the Church» has monkeyed with the text so that anything like the original is currently irretrievable.
CNN is not suggesting, from its lofty pedestal of perverted propaganda, that Jesus has anything in common with Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, is it?
If anything, this protest suggests that the college has excelled in its stated goal of allowing «students to observe different models of achievement, then set their own course with conviction.»
Most of the loud atheists are intellectual losers that feel like they need to band together and cause a ruckus because they haven't got the stones to do anything constructive as you suggested.
In adopting Anselm's dictum that God is «that which none greater can be conceived,» they suggest that this means that God is the greatest power but not the only power; anything actual at all has some degree of power.
They are godless because hate and pride are the hallmarks of non believers and those who reject God / Christ as well as anything or entity that would dare suggest they bow to any other than self.
I say move in this direction: for it is manifestly utterly unfair to Professor Lampe's position to suggest that he does anything of the sort.
@colin You have a nasty habit of putting words in others mouths that were never uttered.No where in the postings, in my short participation with cnn, have I ever suggested a 6000 year old earth.Since this has happened repeatedly, I am left to the conclusion that you are a habitual liar and therefore anything you say must be considered suspect.
IO suggest that if you see a comment that upsets you because it challenges the Christian faith, you go to the sports sections and don't write anything here that embarrasses you of Christ!
Indeed, this is the reason why Scripture and Christian tradition uphold it, a fact which suggests that if anything, it is the abolition of capital punishment which threatens to cheapen life.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z