Resumes can
often be vague which is a big mistake.
As I mentioned before, symptoms of Hashimoto's can
often be vague, but you might notice some of the following:
Often it is a vague concept meaning «very large» or «beyond imagination».
Still, public companies» financial statements
often are vague, and multiple firms are known to use verbatim answers when explaining how a given risk relates to their operations.
Not exact matches
All too
often, I see principals of advisory firms convince themselves that they have a succession plan in place when, in fact — more
often than not — what they have
is more of a
vague idea of what they hope will happen.
The results
are often vague and unappealing.»
What
's more, when women do receive feedback, studies show it
is often vague and not tied to business outcomes.
The claims also
are often vague or mistaken regarding the rockets they include.
His forecast horizon
is often vague, but he seems mostly to address extreme sentiment readings and their implications for return horizons several months or more in the future, and we grade his forecasts accordingly.
By some estimates, close to a third of all new U.S. patents
are of questionable quality,
often because the invention claimed
is not new or because the patent
is vague or overly broad.
These searches can
be laborious, because
often the title and the abstract of patents in the search results
are extremely
vague or general.
In fact, as will become all too clear, Deleuze's response to this problem
is often no less
vague, obscure, at times near tautologous, than Whitehead's own.
What
is more, the post-Enlightenment knack of reducing Christianity itself to
vague, generic qualities hardly distinguishable from gentle manners or sound citizenship (about which more below) yielded a foundational notion of Christianity — an «essence,» it
was often called — so insubstantial that it could hardly sustain any specificities or provoke any controversy at all.
For both Catholics and Protestants, architectural ideals have
often been stated as
vague principles rather than definitive guidelines.
I've
often thought that the Bible
is deliberately
vague on a lot of things.
The challenge for churches
is to help channel teenagers» free - floating,
often vague interest in spirituality into sincere religious conviction that grounds a life of faith.
In particular, the artist
is often said to
be compelled to work because he recognizes and finds irresistible an envisaged result, however
vague and puzzling that result might seem when he begins to create.
Since the Greeks (as indeed most of the ancient world though
often in
vague and undefined ways)
were accustomed to think of death in terms of the survival of an immaterial soul, the Jewish emphasis on the resurrection of the fleshly body seemed not only unnecessary, but unspiritual and even repellent.
The few biblical ideas which may have circulated among the common people
were so
vague and
often contradictory that they can not
be the basis for the precision, extensiveness, unity, and vigor of the material in the Qur» an.
Often God
is presented as such a
vague, abstract reality - in many cases no more than a hypothesis - that the notion that such a God could
be truly known and loved, let alone
be our personal fulfilment,
is risible.
This does not mean the
vague and comfortable awareness that we get from our culture — and all too
often from our churches and church schools — that Jesus
was a good guy who talked about love.
All too
often, politicians on both the left and the right cloak their public policy positions in
vague claims that they
are based in the Bible or Christian theology.
Often one's desperation
is so quiet that even the person himself
is aware of Only a
vague, nameless restlessness.
The actual texts of the constitutions
were all too
often ignored in favour of
vague and spurious invocations of «the spirit of the Council», or else they
were superficially raided for selective and misleading quotations.
That
is obvious in a broad and
vague way when we consider some of the various ways in which we speak of trying (and
often failing) to understand: We speak of hoping to understand the instruction manual that accompanies a new word processor and of trying to understand a novel like James Joyce's Ulysses; though both
are printed texts, what it
is to understand one
is quite different from what it
is to understand the other.
Spirituality
is way too
vague a term and
often ends up anywhere a person «feels» they ought go.
Their religion
was like a dried flower pressed in a Bible, and
often seemed to consist of nothing more than a desire for peaceful feelings, a
vague longing to
be connected with something that transcends the self and a sense of obligation to
be decent to their fellows — all positive stirrings, but hardly the vigorous plant that could flourish in a nurturing religious community.
One can affirm a bodily resurrection without such literalistic smugness; however, such a dogmatic insistence on a bodily resurrection
is often indicative of a
vague grasp of the problems involved.
What exactly this means
is, as so
often with such enterprises, a little
vague, though breathlessly described.
Hasker's third proposition
is that for the problem of divine non-intervention to
be a real problem, «we must
be able to identify specific kinds of cases in which God morally ought to intervene but does not» Many critics of (traditional) theism probably already have a more or less
vague list of such cases, which might include genocidal events, such as the Nazi holocaust and the Rwandan massacre; wars; large - scale natural disasters; conditions of chronic poverty, in which millions of children die from starvation or
are permanently stunted because of inadequate protein; the sexual molestation of children, which
often leaves them psychologically scarred for the rest of their lives; death preceded by long, painful illnesses, such as cancer or AIDS, or by mind - destroying conditions, such as Alzheimer's disease; and the kinds of events described by Dostoyevski, such as the soldier using his pistol to get a mother's baby to giggle with delight and then blowing its brains out.
Vague generalities about the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man have
often been spoken which do not cut down through our crust of convention to where the race problem
is.
Vague language like «best by,» «enjoy by» and «sell by»
often leads consumers to throw away food that
is safe to eat.
Then there
's Holt, who
's Everyman appeal
is often ascribed to his
vague air of portliness, but actually comes from the fact that he plays like a man who
's earned his crack at the top, and
is not only determined to get the most out of it, but
is also enjoying it immensely.
It
is important to note that women
often present with atypical symptoms — a
vague sense of «feeling unwell,» nausea, and anxiety.
Mothers
often remember their births differently from other people, and details that
are significant to others (such as for how long the mother pushed, or the timing of her contractions)
are vague to the mother herself.
Toddlers and preschoolers
are often satisfied with
vague answers to questions about where babies come from.
I
'm downvoting this question and here
's why: It
's reasonable to assume that the OP already has a
vague sense that police don't get indicted very
often, and he needs statistics in order to prove it, either to himself or to others.
For example, China's Public Security Bureaus
are granted such
vague and wide - ranging powers to sentence individuals to re-education through labour that it
is often difficult to make the case that an instance of detention
was in clear violation of the law.
While Higgins routinely votes against trade agreements — arguing they
are often too broad, too
vague and skewed against the American worker — he acknowledged the Buffalo area would likely suffer if the United States did not have a trade agreement with Canada.
Robert Trotta (
R - Fort Salonga), a former Suffolk detective, said the police accident reports
were often vague because drivers didn't admit to
being distracted or nervous when approaching intersections with cameras.
Cultural changes
are often vague and indefinable things, but McCallum approaches the issue from a business standpoint.
Since this role plus
vague symbolism
is about the only way that Australia could
be considered «dependent» on Britain - most Australians
are averse to giving these constitutional safeguards to politicians; who love to roll around in the partisan muck far too
often for comfort.
Another danger with
vague letters
is that they can
be passed through many hands, which
often means they won't
be dealt with by anyone.
Your best source of information will
be adverts, although these
are often infuriatingly
vague.
To paraphrase a spy, scientists
often find education - focused conferences and meetings insipid, focused more on the manipulation of
vague ideas and ill - defined symbols than on real and meaningful (and measurable) initiatives and outcomes — but these HHMI Professors presented a wide array of well - conceived and - executed (not to mention well - financed) projects that
are likely to make a real difference in the education of tomorrow's scientists.
Because such implications
are vague or hard to predict, and because part of journalists» job
is also to grab readers» attention, this
is one area in which journalists
often make mistakes.
Indeed, it
is often the case that since the boundaries
are vague, an individual researcher may not even realize the potential problems.
While this undoubtedly represents progress, image - processing methods have struggled to analyse high - grade breast cancer cells as these cells
are often clustered together and have
vague boundaries, which makes successful detection extremely challenging.
It becomes very arbitrary, and all too
often means that clinicians
are determining medical decisions based on lab ranges that
are highly variable and frequently
vague.
The symptoms of dysbiosis
are vague and
often go unnoticed, undiagnosed, and even worse, dismissed by your conventional health care clinicians.