Sentences with phrase «peril because»

They do this at their own peril because Mom's, especially young mothers, are some of the pickiest home buyers that we deal with.
Innovators experiment at their peril because, depending on the type of matter, they risk not getting paid.
Our natural resources are at great peril because of an economic system that does not value standing forests and their services.
The woman is in peril because, during one of the battles with a group of angels, she defended Bayonetta from a surprise attack with her own body and was sent to hell.
In California and Hawaii, the Hawaiian goose, California brown pelican and blunt nosed leopard lizard are in additional peril because of cats.
An Ebola outbreak, for example, would not be a covered peril because it's not listed in the policy.
This storytelling strategy is always fraught with peril because of how readers must refresh their interest level with each new section.
Spoil the film at your own peril because The Handmaiden «s unfolding is one of the most pleasurable film dives of the moment.
«Important US indie films are in peril because they haven't made the leap into the digital age.
Note that certain things are not covered perils because they're not listed in the policy.
Note that certain things are not covered perils because they're not listed in the policy.

Not exact matches

Yet, as a country, we are probably more vulnerable than we were a decade ago because we failed to take seriously the most important lesson of the crisis: the dangers of housing mania and the perils of household debt.
And while it's clear the Liberals hope to use their tax changes as a sort of parable for the standing - up - for - ordinary - workers part of their broader discourse — a centre - left populism that Trudeau believes other like - minded leaders, such as Hillary Clinton, forgot to defend, to their peril — the specific tax changes in question didn't appear on the Liberals» radar because the current arrangements are unfair.
For example, like homeowners insurance, renters insurance is more expensive in Florida because of the increased risk of perils (especially tropical storms and hurricanes).
Frequently, renters insurance for mobile homes are more expensive in some areas because they are more susceptible to certain perils.
Given my paternal Orthodox roots, I am pleased to read this because I recognize the perils of Christians ascribing to their ethnic nationalisms near canonical status.
I think dismissing this from that verse is where the «theological peril» lies because it strips one more piece of majesty away from God's Word which is masterful in its forethought and in the pictures and shadows we're told by Paul that it contains.
It is the author's opinion that AA has an excellent chance of survival and continued growth because it has avoided the mistakes of the Washingtonian movement and has protected itself against the perils of institutionalism and the dangers of becoming side tracked into other causes.
The faculty - lounge types know they can rant and rave till the cows come home about such issues because the targets of their trumped - up ire (the United States and Christians) present no retaliatory peril.
And we ignore such analysis at our own peril, I think, because the alternative would be what I fear Rose commends: a «traditional» faith that (wrongly) imagines itself unaffected by tectonic shifts in how we believe.
Read it at your peril, because once you do, you will no longer be able to say you haven't heard the message from heaven that God doesn't play fiddle at our concerts.
For us today the perils are horrendous but the possibilities are momentous — all because of the urge that is implanted in life to lead to yet more life.
Because our God can not do this, however, we «are obliged to settle for second best,» a universe «containing the peril and potential destructiveness of libertarian freedom.»
The immediate context shows Jesus in peril as his adversaries among the Judeans threaten to stone him to death because, as John tells us, he, being a man, had «made himself God» (10:33).
Because SEO is such an integral part of modern marketing, businesses of any size ignore it at their peril.
Because you automatically are setting yourself up for peril.
In fact, many women learn the pleasures and perils of snow - shoveling precisely because there is no man around.
Bringing up Google illustrates why modern campaigns ignore the internet at their peril, because their rivals probably aren't following the same script.
When, last October, the party conference voted to reject a leadership - backed motion allowing for the expansion of Gatwick airport if it's recommended by the Davies commission, Clegg pointedly remarked, «it will need to be discussed again because, how can I put it, I've seen the perils of the past of putting something which you know in your heart of hearts is not necessarily deliverable.»
«You need a long - term funding mechanism for the subway system because we've ignored it our peril,» Cuomo said.
He told BBC News: «My party is in peril, we are facing an existential crisis and I just don't want us to be in this position because I think there are millions of people in this country who need a left - leaning government.»
The coho are in peril mainly because of degradation of the coastal streams where the adult fish spawn and the juveniles spend the first half of their lives, says Diaz - Soltero.
Policy - makers or lobbyists who seek to remove scientists because they don't like their findings or advice do so at the peril of their citizens.
That's at their peril, because magnesium is in a class of its own when it comes to its sheer variety of benefits in the body.
I wrote The Perils of Cyber-Dating because I felt I had a compelling story to share.
In order to do so, however, he must decipher the meaning behind Dumbledore's (who is dead) offerings, of which include an old book, and some contraption that collects light, because as with all powerful sages, his last request was that he be allowed to screw with the gang during a time of peril.
Without question Pt. 1 is the weakest in the franchise but it seems that it drained into Pt. 2 because despite moments of complete peril and action there are scenes that drag unbelievably slow killing any momentum built up by some fantastical action sequence.
The whole thing is played pretty much as a farce and because of that, there's barely a sense of peril.
Not long after High Fidelity, Nick Hornby wrote another book about the perils of romance — this time because a guy (Colin Firth) can't seem to let go of his soccer mania long enough to give any heed to his girlfriend (Ruth Gemmell).
Also, the fact that this is a Tom Cruise film robs the action scenes of suspense because we know that no matter what kind of peril hes in, hes not going to die.
It's about a guy who figures out at some point exactly what the Italians were saying all along in this genre: Fall in love at your own peril, because sooner or later, one of you is going to eat the other.
This year alone, they released six of the most inventive, quality offerings out there: two terrifying survival thrillers, Damien Power's devastating and brilliant Killing Ground and Sam Patton's lesser but still - worthy Desolation; Sean Byrne's masterful tale of artistic obsession and satanic possession The Devil's Candy (all three even harder to endure because the featured families in peril are so human and likable); A Dark Song, an unnerving occult thriller in which a woman hires a medium to help make contact with her dead daughter; and House on Willow Street, which, similar to last year's horror highlight Don't Breathe, sees a house robbery — led by a woman with a mission, played by modern scream - queen Sharni Vinson — go terrible wrong, but this time in a more supernatural way.
Without the aid of the outside world, Cheadle's Paul Rusesabagina must use his own contacts to protect his own family and those to whom he has given shelter at the hotel he manages, putting himself in peril simply because it's the right thing to do.
Because what you see in Wisconsin is once you lose it, you lose it... So it is fraught with peril when you're dealing with governors or mayors who you know don't want to negotiate fairly, and that's part of why you want to change the climate.
Later, in the funeral procession, I accidentally inserted the Jaguar into the group of cars belonging to the immediate family, rather than the cars belonging to the wider circle of more distant relatives and friends, so I felt a bit embarrassed as I'm sure many people thought, who is this jerk who thinks they go to the front of the procession just because they're in a Jag?!? Ah, such are the perils of driving a fancy, flashy car worth $ 120,000, a sum of money that in my hometown buys you quite a nice house.
This was a fraught exercise, building this car, because luxury brands reach downmarket at their peril.
paying for a freelance editor as a newbie is not necessarily going to turn out as well as you might hope — simply because freelance editors do not belong to an organizational framework like a publishing house and therefore if they botch the job for you, the problem is just yours (if they work for a publisher and botch the job, then they put their own career in peril).
And quite right, I say, because the narrative arc in these books is the fundamental narrative arc going way back in the human brain: the thrill of danger, peril, and then resolution and safety.
According to a report from the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), there were 10.4 million «refugees of concern» in 2012, and almost half of those who were forced to leave their homes because of war or other peril were children.
A scrawled scrap of paper from the time states that he was baptized «without ceremony, at home, because of the peril of death,» suggesting he was too sickly to risk bringing in to the local church.
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