Sentences with phrase «over a sentence like»

The concern isn't so much over a sentence like I... [more]

Not exact matches

«Content is so competitive right now that losing viewers over a simple issue like buffering could be a death sentence.
For example, the anxious group read sentences like «safety is not guaranteed in our neighborhoods nor in our own homes,» which was intended to highlight the «lack of control over negative circumstances that may happen in life and an uncertain future,» according to the study.
Atheists: I know many there are many people that practice religion just by fanaticism, I've seen many people in my opinion stupid (excuse the word) praying to saints hopping to solve their problems by repeating pre-made sentences over and over, but there are others different, I don't think Religion and Science need to be opposites, I believe in God, I'm Catholic and I have many reasons to believe in him, I don't think however that we should pray instead of looking for the cause and applying a solution, Atheists think they are smart because they focus on Science and technology instead of putting their faith in a God, I don't think God will solve our problems, i think he gave us the means to solve them by ourselves that's were God is, also I think that God created everything but not as a Magical thing but stablishing certain rules like Physics and Quimics etc. he's not an idiot and he knew how to make it so everything was on balance, he's the Scientist of Scientist the Mathematic of Mathematics, the Physician of Physicians, from the tiny little fact that a mosquito, an insect species needs to feed from blood from a completely different species, who created the mosquitos that way?
If you had to read that last sentence over again because it sounded like I was saying the same thing twice, you just proved my point.
In this case, handing someone over to Satan is like giving them a death sentence.
They're more like choruses — just one sentence sung over and over
Yet there's maybe one sentence about that, and in the rest you sound like a broken record by repeating the same stuff over and over again.
Thus a person can start a sentence attacking bankers over the financial crash, and end it - by way of names like Rothschild - talking about The Merchant of Venice, Israel / Palestine, and the Holocaust.
Now that word has leaked that convicted former lobbyist Richard Lipsky is cooperating with federal authorities in hopes of reducing his jail sentence, «no - good» elected officials wringing their hands, looking over their shoulders, and treating their cellphones like «live» grenades.
Queens Democratic State Senator Shirley Huntley, who looks like a church lady and voted like one too, was sentenced to a year and a day in federal prison for looting her sham non-profit of over $ 100,000.
They found that selection was the likely cause of how negative sentence structures changed over time (like how the Old English «Ic ne secge» became the Early Modern English «I say not»).
Connecting with someone over a computer can be difficult, so its small notions like using your date's name in a sentence that makes your contact seem more personal and more like the offline experience.
Feeling like he got a raw deal with an over the top 8 year sentence, the two men help make his last free days memorable.
To sound deep, each celebrity voice over whispers their lines and trails off like they're reading every sentence with an ellipsis.
With supports like sentence frames and providing coaching / feedback, students can engage in this type of assessment... and it starts to support that way of thinking that continues after the assessment is over...
After it printed over this sentence — or that sentence up there — like 200 times, the sentence would probably be a foot tall.
There's a brief and humorous sentence about each tablet, including the iPad «It's like a giant iPhone but... it's like a giant iPhone» and the Galaxy Tab «Android OS, but Android OS... for a phone», then the video pans over to a veiled product with a Motorola logo beneath it.
In the beginning (I love starting a sentence like that), all writers struggled over simple sentences, meaning back in the early days of learning how to talk and write as kids, writing was hard for all of us.
Let's Pretend This Never Happened by Jenny Lawson Amy Einhorn, $ 25.95, 336 pages This is the kind of book where, once you've got the lay of the land, a sentence like «[My neighbor] seemed more concerned this time, possibly because I was belting out Bonnie Tyler and crying while swinging a machete over a partially disturbed grave» makes total sense.
Each chapter has maybe one or two sentences about what will be happening in it, because I like to keep things vague so the characters can still take over if they want to.
I will look for issues like overused words, too many adverbs, purple prose, sentence fragments, confusing sentences, over or under describing, cliche phrases, awkward or unnatural dialogue, and anything else that prevents your prose from shining.
Just like the agonizing over the opening sentences of your book.
In the beginning (I love starting a sentence like that), all fiction writers struggled over simple sentences, meaning back in the early days of learning how to talk and write as kids, writing was hard for all of us.
But hey, maybe over coffee, a couple of little soon - forgotten sentences from somebody like Pam, is enough to make the sale.
I know confirmyshun bias hits us all and we all need ter try harder ter bend over backwards like Feynmann tells us, but naughty David Appell, doncha» know yer really shouldn't pluck a sentence out of context like that.
Matthew Its not a good start when you paint an long historical endeavor with one sentence, no matter how you may try to shoe horn in a term that makes the over simplifcation less objectionable, the sentence remains exactly what it is: a freshman like, throat clearing, generalization to get the ball rolling.
I'll just come up with like, one good password and pray that no one comes after me, you need to look in the mirror and repeat this sentence over and over again: I will get hacked.
A few months ago, most of my sentences over a couple of weeks related to not feeling good enough and otherwise feeling distraught about my perceived lack of ability to thrive in social settings like my friends did.
So, take a minute and look over each sentence on your resume and start thinking like this.
When you try to enlarge, the text doesn't fit all on one page so you can only read a few words of one sentence before you have to try and scroll to the side - then back and forth like this over and over.
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