Sentences with phrase «often hear the other»

Since then, I've often heard others talking up the value of learning outdoors and thought, «Why does it have to stop at the end of Reception?».
The Houston - based figurative painter's solo show was inspired by Vance's current living situation, a 4 - plex apartment building shared by three other single women who can often hear each other through the thin walls.

Not exact matches

I've often heard it said that «To be a good leader, be a good follower first», then you know how it feels to be in the other person's shoes.
«A leading expert on making decisions and influencing others presents a career's worth of evidence on why the views you don't want to consider are often the ones you need to hear most,» is Grant's quick description of this book, out March 20.
In all, Consumer Reports reached out to 17 automakers to find out, among other things, how often they've heard from their customers about exploding sunroofs, whether they've detected any telling patterns, and if they would support a standard of glass that would make shatterings less likely.
I'm told «no» all the time because I often ask for more than others do and therefore you need to be willing to hear «no.»
Other women business leaders — along with everyone else — need to hear such advice and constructive comments more often, not less.
Listeners tune in and out, change stations, and are often engaged in some other activity while the radio is on, so your message needs to appear often if they're going to hear it.
Ask for their feedback about what services are most often requested, which ones are often asked for in conjunction with others and what common complaints they hear.
Those individuals are often too busy to hear a sales pitch and are likely already being courted by a dozen other vendors.
In this morning's hearing with the House Energy and Commerce Committee, New Mexico Representative Ben Lujan cornered Mark Zuckerberg with a question about so - called «shadow profiles» — the term often used to refer to the data that Facebook collects on non-users and other hidden data that Facebook holds but does not offer openly on the site for users to see.
For a hearing where the Senators themselves were often the ones making fools of themselves, it was nice to see the shoe on the other foot.
You wouldn't think it would be hard to list your accomplishments but often times we tend to belittle our own achievements, thinking that they are not as grandiose as we would like or as exciting as other stories we have heard.
If the fundamentals and the technicals are completely opposed to each other, if the economic data is completely mixed, if the trends are sometimes showing up and sometimes showing down at the same time, and we have all sorts of different ways where we can find that, a lot of times the best approach, and this is something people don't ever want to hear, but I tell them often, is sometimes the best trade is no trade at all.
The other pension plan that you often hear about is called a defined contribution plan.
We hear so often that God is love but it is up to us here to express that love to others.
I also hear of religious people seeking to discriminate against others that don't share their religion, primarily atheists, and often Muslims too.
Marriages often have difficulty that is swept under the rug... and a third - party counselor can be very helpful to explore those difficulties, differences, and to «hear» each other.
I have often said in my preaching and teaching, and have heard many others say the same, that Jesus died in the cross so that we don't have to.
This statement is often cited as a universal description of the holy otherness and imperceptibility of God, but anyone familiar with other texts will hear the soft whisper of a reply, «Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God» (Matt.
But you'll often hear Friends apply the terms «liberal Quaker,» «conservative Quaker,» and «pastoral / evangelical Quaker» to themselves or others, so let me take a shot at explaining those terms.
Though we often hear of «Tentmaking pastors,» I have yet to hear of one who not only provides for himself, but also for the other members on his team!
There are other (often forgotten) voices from the Judeo - Christian past which are now being heard more clearly — people whose work or writing has contributed to the rise of the contemporary naturalist worldview.
As Hatch has noted elsewhere, because many evangelicals «have abandoned the university, the arts, and other realms of «high culture» «they are often «least capable of winning the right to be heard by twentieth - century intellectuals.»
The Springer show is somewhere where you are more likely to see Christians who probably a lot of other Christians would say «they are not really Christians», so you are just highlighting this characterisic of Christianity that we hear about all too often which exposes the conflicted nature of that bag of garbage sold to men by other men long ago.
Often I find myself questioning others people's motives; often I find myself assuming the worst; often I am too lazy (or threatened or fearful or angry) to hear my fellow ChristiansOften I find myself questioning others people's motives; often I find myself assuming the worst; often I am too lazy (or threatened or fearful or angry) to hear my fellow Christiansoften I find myself assuming the worst; often I am too lazy (or threatened or fearful or angry) to hear my fellow Christiansoften I am too lazy (or threatened or fearful or angry) to hear my fellow Christians out.
, those who had a Ph.D. in New Testament Greek look down upon those who just have plain Ph.D's in Bible Exposition or Old Testament, etc. (I can't tell you how often I heard my DTS profs make such comments about colleagues in other departments.)
i'm sure many of the people on the Springer show were Christians that other Christians would say «they are not a real Christian» — that age old saying that we hear all too often that exposes that religion's conflicted nature.
I think often we read ourselves as Jesus and others as the Pharisees too — I don't think I've heard many sermons taking what Jesus says to the Pharisees as a direct challenge to us, as opposed to assuming that we're on Jesus» side and confronting those who disagree with us.
When we identify said preachers as false teachers leading both themselves and those who follow them to hell, when we declare others as on their way to hell, and especially when we warn them they are lost, we often hear these words (or the equivalent), «Judge not» (Matthew 7:1).
Surely we have heard this formula often enough in linguistics and other disciplines.
In those for whom religion is an acute fever one often finds symptoms of nervous instability, psychical visitations, exalted emotional sensibility, often fallen into trances, heard voices, seen visions and other ordinarily behavior patterns classed as pathological.
In most circles, we mostly hear a version of American church history that features European colonialists and settlers (often evangelicals) as the heroes of the story — and then looks at other groups with suspicion.
But is it not a fact that we often, perhaps usually, have in our minds an impression of the appearance of any person about whom we have thought or heard much, even though we may have had no actual basis for the impression, either in our own experience or in what others have told us?
But as much as this can not be said for another distinction, of which one often hears, between the historical interpretation of the Bible on the one hand, and an interpretation variously called devotional, religious, or theological, on the other.
How often we say when we meet a person about whom we have heard others speak: «You do not look in the least like the person I had expected to see.»)
A private of the Irish Guards wrote in 1915 that his chaplain was «our mascot, our lucky star» and noted how other soldiers were often heard to remark, «that Irish chaplain does stick to his lot, doesn't he?»
Third, the minister can arrange for him to get acquainted with an experienced and accepting AA member who may serve as a bridge to feeling at home in an AA group [In a study of factors which produce «readiness» for affiliation with AA, Harrison M. Trice discovered that alcoholics with the following characteristics tend to relate effectively to AA: Before contact with AA, they often shared troubles with others, had lost drinking friends, had heard positive things about AA, had no relative or friend who had quit through willpower.
I often hear pastors and other ministers say they are The Priest of the New Testament, and we are supposed to bring our tithe to them.
I can't remember where I heard it, but the other day I chanced upon an audio clip of a few pastors discussing that Christians often view God's omniscience of their souls as a warm fuzzy sort of thing.
But you do hear us mention the Christian god more often than others for the simple fact that most of us grew up in the US where even today just over 75 % of the population claims to be Christian.
Would love to hear from you on this work: When we hear the term ethics, our minds often race to stories we have heard about bank fraud and other....
Too often, someone in a church will read a book, or hear of another church somewhere that is doing something, and they will think it is a good idea, and will try and charge ahead without ever consulting others in the church, or consulting the leadership of the church, or, most importantly, consulting God through prayer and fasting.
Second, and more crucially, that secular objection (as in the hippie saying I heard so often in my youth: «Don't lay your value trips on me, man») rests on the assumption that someone can authentically sexually donate himself to another without making a definitive commitment to the other person; that is, he can «hedge his bets,» so speak, without paying the consequences ¯ a foolish assumption given the rates of sexually transmitted diseases, the divorce rates, the numbers of children born out of wedlock, and so forth.
How often we have heard Christians say after some deep bereavement or other trouble, «I could not have taken it if the Lord had not seen me through it!»
How often have we heard from couples who are getting a divorce that «they just don't love each other any more»?
One money - saving tip that I often hear from other vegans on a budget is to make your own nut butters.
David, Never heard of the Cabbage Town Cafe, but used to visit «the other vegetarian restaurant» in Ithaca often when my daughter was at Cornell.
I therefore predict that amongst other things, this will lead to the term «low migration» being heard more often in the digital inkjet arena;
If you have any other ideas, let me hear them - I make this soup often enough that I need fresh angles to work!
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