Sentences with phrase «often hear them telling me»

We often hear tell of things like «net spend» and «war chests,» which purport to quantify the spending power of a particular club during a particular transfer window.
In my work with matchmakers, I often hear them telling me it's hard to find matches for women of color.

Not exact matches

Clients often want an adviser to commit to a rate of return, and advisers may be tempted to tell clients what they want to hear.
In the latter (or, to hear him tell it, middle) portion of his career, those causes have often been philanthropic rather than commercial ones: drug law reform, death penalty abolition, ocean conservation.
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.
You'll often hear people tell you not to get caught up in the details and to focus on the bigger picture.
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.»
«You often hear space starts at 100 kilometers — that's based on where aerodynamic forces start having an effect to where you can actually control your [craft] with wings,» Jesse Gossner, an orbital - mechanics engineer who teaches at the US Air Force's Advanced Space Operations School, told Business Insider.
You often hear doctors tell you to «know your numbers» when it comes to your health; your cholesterol, your blood pressure, and so on.
When people first hear about Bitcoin, they are often told that it is a form of anonymous cash that can not be tracked by any government or company.
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.
Entire villages would gather and hear and acknowledge the testimony of victims, while perpetrators would tell their stories and often be led to repentance and a desire to make amends.
It's a story we've been told often — for some of us, a story we've heard all our lives.
They often hear voices that tell them how to live their lives.
I work in a healthcare facility and I can't tell you how often I hear my deeply religious patients honestly suggesting that we just nuke all of the middle east — women, children, included.
TV preachers like Kenneth Copeland tell us what we often want to hear: «God intends for you to be satisfied in every area of your life.»
Herodotus also tells us that in general, eunuchs were cringing, fawning leeches who often just told the king what they thought he wanted to hear.
The non-believers may not want to hear this, however I feel compelled to tell you that GOD does exist and loves you no matter what you think, how you feel or how often you reject him.
Instead, Outler feels, «mainline congregations would be well served if they were told not, «You must love» (which is true and which they've heard often enough), but rather «You can love» because «You are loved.
In my opinion, when people who are told they are hurting or demeaning someone else often they just can't hear it.
, 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.)
How often have you heard it said that you can tell who the true Christians are by the fruit they produce?
I can't tell you how often I have heard pastors say, «Well, Jesus told stories, and so should we.»
Those of us who stay are often so hurt by their leaving, or so threatened by what we think it says about those who stay, that we can't hear what they are telling us.
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?
How often have we heard Christians tell the story about how they called up such - and - such a business and gave them a «piece of my mind» when there was a problem with their account?
@Sandy, I notice you had nothing to say when I explained that my uncles often heard God's voice telling them to do bad things when they were in the midst of a paranoid schizophrenic episode.
How often do we hear from Christians that they haven't any bias against gays per se, but are compelled to believe they are sinners because the bible tells them so?
He told the London hearing into abuse in the Anglican church that the so - called «blue files» on staff were also often missing Criminal Records Bureau (CRB) check data.
My only concern is that far too often, I hear pastors justify the modern practice of preaching because «the Bible tells us to preach.»
How often have you heard the pastor on Trinity Sunday tell jokes about why he never preaches about the Trinity and isn't about to begin?
The comments preachers hear after the service too often tell them that they were not understood.
Anyone who knows anything about fermentation or history will tell you that it is a lie, yet I still have heard pastors make the remark often.
I love a good «Italian sounding» pasta dish, but am tired of constantly hearing people tell me it has too many carbohydrates and not to eat it often.
I use this cacao powder: http://amzn.to/2axcwEB I have never seen that warning before on any cacao powder brand and have never heard that cacao causes birth defects so I'm not sure what to tell you about that but I love cacao and use it often for desserts, oats, hot chocolate etc..
I often hear that certified coffees are too hard to find, and people tell me they'd buy sustainable coffee if only it were at the grocery store.
Ashlae, I usually don't comment on this or any other blog, but this post compelled me to stop lurkin» and tell you something that I'm sure you've read and heard often, namely, that you are a tremendously talented writer (and baker!)
I can't tell you how often I've heard the volume lowered at restaurants when Spotify commercials come on.
I say «If» because often we are told what we want to hear and then are lied to, eg the cycle of change we were promised.
Often times, you'll hear phrases like «squares vs. sharps» or «Pros vs. Joes» which is great, but it only tells a portion of the story.
We hear the «Audi going to F1» stories so often, it's hard to tell or know whether the rumours are old or new.
The Cardinals» third baseman and World Series MVP was an unknown outside of St. Louis when the postseason began, but the details of his story have since been told and retold so often that Freese himself hoped «people aren't getting sick of hearing about it.»
The complainers are a far bigger problem for Arsenal than Wenger, the board or the players.These folk only seem happy when Arsenal are in crisis, how often do you hear these fools telling our best players they should leave, just so they can wallow in their preferred state of self pity.
Make sure your kids hear you tell your spouse that often but purposefully.
When I told them that what I wanted them to do was to find about 15 minutes each day to do something fun with their child, I often heard, «Oh, you know, when I come home, I'm tired from a tough day at work and I have so many things to do so it's really hard to do that.»
I usually don't say «I'm sorry» when I hear someone tell me he or she's newly divorced — often, it's a happier, healthier outcome — but in your case, I'm truly sorry.
When divorce is stirring up the emotional pot for parents, kids often get into a caretaking role, protecting their parents from their emotional needs by telling them what their parents often need to hear: «I am fine.
But I do have a wish or two for you in 2015 — please consider getting rid of the script in your head of what love, relationships or marriage should look like and instead ask yourself what you want them to look like; that you stop looking to others to tell you what you should or shouldn't do and question, question, question any advice you read or hear from Internet experts or, for that matter, even credentialed experts (some are just not very good or have their own biases); and, finally, to stop giving credence to articles in women's magazines that often fuel anxiety and chip away at self - esteem because the emphasis always seems to be that you're doing something wrong and if you just did X, Y and Z, you'd have what you want and live happily ever after.
When the loss happens later in the pregnancy or during or after birth, I often hear moms tell me that, everywhere they go, it seems as if everyone else has or is having a baby, which further reinforces the thought, «I don't have my baby.»
If your preschooler ignores you when you tell him no, maybe it's because he hears it too often.
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