Sentences with phrase «of phrase book»

If researchers can capture and understand these molecular exchanges, they might be able to produce a kind of phrase book of chemical reactions.

Not exact matches

The phrase had been popularized earlier that year in a book by Mervyn King, a former governor of the Bank of England.
This post is the first in a series of posts that will dig into the ABCs of Talent Management — a phrase popularized by Brad and Geoff Smart's excellent book, «TopGrading», where they introduced the idea that every employee is either an A, B, or C player.
Taking a leaf out of Tesla's «how not to» book, the phrase leads Volvo customers into believing that the car sports more autonomy than it really does.
There is a reason that phrase, «You must be as children» (paraphrased) is in the bible... because you really would have to be a child lacking wisdom and critical thought to believe the ridiculous books of the Abrahamaic faiths, and you'd have to ba an even bigger fool to think they are the last word in spiritual truth.
Indeed, Abraham Lincoln's and William Seward's use of phrases from the Book of Common Prayer in their Thanksgiving proclamations of 1863 bathes America's national feast day in a Eucharistic hue.
At many points Wesley sounds like a son of the Reformation in his emphasis on the finality of biblical authority and in his desire to be, in the much quoted phrase, a homo unius libri (a «man of one book»).
A little later, packing up his manuscripts, Ford happened to see «the page and the very commended phrase «old - eyed», and to notice that somehow in the rounds of fatigued retyping that used to precede a writer's final sign - off on a book in the days before word processors, the original and rather dully hybridised «cold - eyed» had somehow lost its «c» and become «old - eyed», only nobody'd noticed since they both made a kind of sense.»
Many Americans have joined «the harried leisure class» (this phrase is the title of Linder's book).
Writing how he speaks, this book can seem most of the time like the transcript from a motivational talk, saturated with turns of phrase, just like he's having a chat with you about something that really inspires him.
This phrase is the title of a chapter in Dwight Anderson's book The Other Side of the Bottle (New York: A. A. Wyn, 1950).
Phyllis Trible subtitles her book Texts of Terror, «Literary - Feminist Readings of Biblical Narratives,» packing several «new» methodologies into a phrase.
But they presage the opening dirgelike phrases of his Decline and Restoration, the «other book» that weighed upon his heart from his very first days at the university but which he did not actually begin to write until after the outbreak of World War I, in 1914:
If Banning's account has a shortcoming, it is in his effort to explain this two-fold commitment to the «sacred fire of liberty,» the Madisonian phrase that provides the book's title.
Tough - guy New York newspaperman Pete Hamill praised the book as a scathing indictment of the «culture of poverty» (yes, he really uses this phrase) fostered by «Eamon de Valera's Ireland,» while the literary critic Denis Donoghue, writing in the New York Times, presented the book in much the same way (though he clearly lacks Hamill's enthusiasm for the story).
Such is one of many phrases in the book that might — just might — deliver a shock of self - knowledge to curious readers, who might then want to know more.
The bible is an extensive compilation of books and you can find a phrase somewhere to justify about anything.
As I read Hartshorne, he maintains that «God is not spatially localized» (Schilpp, 545) and the meaning of this phrase is that God is everywhere — «God is not spatially separated from things» he has written (Schilpp, 545), and in a recent book he claims that deity, the universally immanent, is everywhere.5 Given this assumption Hartshorne is then able to say that since God, being everywhere, includes the regional standpoint of every temporal actual entity, he must intuit all occasions wherever they are as they occur» (Schilpp, 545).
This is why Donald Baillie chose for the title of his book the Pauline phrase God was in Christ rather than saying «Jesus is God».
«55 What is conspicuously absent, both in this quotation and in the rest of his book on social ethics, is the phrase «social justice.»
Jonathan Wilson, coiner of the phrase new monasticism, is father and father - in - law of the key members of Rutba, which hosted the conference, edited the book and sponsors the Web site by the same name.
This is not a new insight — Corbin Carnell treated it more than 30 years ago in Bright Shadow of Reality, whose subtitle was the nicely phrased «C. S. Lewis and the Feeling Intellect,» and David Downing also emphasizes it in his new book — but Jacobs uses this narrative thread to good advantage in uncovering continuity in Lewis's life.
«The human prospect», to use a phrase from the title of Heilbroner's book, 11 is bleak.
I have one word (ok, phrase) for the teachers of prosperity theology: Foxe's Book of Martyrs.
For this book, I am using the phrase to describe our sense of self at a time when you feel like everything that you once knew «for sure» is being figured out all over again.
Phrases in the Book of Mormon and elsewhere have been changed to reflect that.
The most provocative of Bonhoeffer's books was his Letters and Papers from Prison that included phrases like «religionless Christianity,» «Jesus as the man for other,» and «the God who forsakes us.»
erience that ONLY my friends who are not attached to a particular tradition, and understand the phrase «religion in the abstract,» will usually have read more than one of those book, taken more than one seriously, or shown any intellectual honesty or maturity about the subject at all...
Though the phrase «just society» appears in the title of Dodaro's book, there is scant attention to the corporate dimension of the city of God.
It's my experience that ONLY my friends who are not attached to a particular tradition, and understand the phrase «religion in the abstract,» will usually have read more than one of those book, taken more than one seriously, or shown any intellectual honesty or maturity about the subject at all...
The Book of Life is a translation from the Greek phrase tō biblō tēs zōēs.
The third phrase, the Lamb's Book of Life, refers to a book which contains the names of every person who has eternal life in Jesus ChrBook of Life, refers to a book which contains the names of every person who has eternal life in Jesus Chrbook which contains the names of every person who has eternal life in Jesus Christ.
So, in a volume containing dozens of books, as well as thousands of stories, parables, and countless pieces of wisdom, how does one choose a phrase about snakes as the basis for any «Christian» theology — or, for that matter, any considered spiritual philosophy at all?
The next part of the book is devoted to what I called «revolutionary theology,» a phrase that, at least in those days, struck people as a world - class oxymoron.
Thankfully, however, there is still plenty of room for some homework — research that will enable a full, frank, and accurate comparison of these revisionist interpretations of the «Power greater than ourselves» phrase with some of the very clear original Big Book language about «that Power, which is God.»
The story of how the «God as we understood Him» phrase came to be inserted in the Big Book and Twelve Steps; and the truth seems to have been much distorted by the claim of an AA.
In fact, the very phrase «law written on the heart» is biblical; it comes from the New Testament book of Romans.
The holiness of Yahweh is at once distinct and radiant.4 This quality which removes Yahweh from man as the heavens are removed from the earth conveys at the same time his immediate impingement, his «historicity,» his self - disclosure in human life and human community, his «in - the - midst - ness» (notice the repeated phrase throughout the book of Isaiah, «the holy one of Israel»).
Thus, emerging churches often characterize themselves as «ancient - future,» a phrase that comes from a series of books authored by Webber (Ancient - Future Faith, Ancient - Future Evangelism, Ancient - Future Time).
Concerning the phrase «space and time», the following is an excerpt from William Lane Craig's book, On Guard: «For think of what the universe is: all of space - time reality, including all matter and energy.
But the fact that popularizers like Driscoll borrow material in books like A Call to Resurgence, without documenting the source of every turn of phrase in painstaking detail?
His view can be summarised beautifully in the best phrase in the book: «The universe gradually wakes up and becomes aware of itself.»
According to the excellent phrase of André Neher, from his fine book on the prophets, a gulf of nothingness separates the new creation from the old.5 No Aufhebung can suppress this deadly fault.
The first 170 pages are an exposition of Islam by a Western writer with scarcely a phrase to which a Muslim could take exception, and the rest of the book is a guide to Christian missionary work with Muslims, with which they have little sympathy.
This phrase is often misunderstood, especially by biblical literalists, as meaning the words of God, supposedly contained in the Holy Book.
To use another phrase for the wisdom of Jesus that I see as saying the same thing as «a way that leads beyond convention», the way of Jesus is Robert Frost's phrase that became the title of M. Scott Peck's best - selling book.
This phrase appears twice in the book, here and at the beginning of chapter 3.
In the Book of Psalms alone, the phrase «the name of the Lord» occurs ninety - eight times.
(There's a joke among CBA writers about the optimism... and arrogance... of using the phrase «Donald - Millerish» to describe your book!
That phrase «mourn with those who mourn» is found in the New Testament and is also found in the Book of Mormon.
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