Sentences with phrase «phrases used often»

It's a phrase he used often during the campaign kick off event for his bid to replace Tom Libous in the Southern Tier Senate seat, a district that leans Republican, but could potentially be moved to the Democratic column with the candidacy of former Broome County Executive Barbara Fiala.
Here, Gale and Katniss are star - crossed lovers (a phrase used often to describe Katniss and Peeta) who can not make their feelings for each other known, lest the entire charade that kept her and Peeta alive disintegrates.
A phrase used often (see The Best Posts & Articles On Student Engagement), but its meaning can vary.

Not exact matches

Often, but not always, forward - looking statements can be identified by the use of words and phrases such as «plans,» «expects,» «is expected,» «budget,» «scheduled,» «estimates,» «forecasts,» «intends,» «anticipates,» or «believes» or variations (including negative variations) of such words and phrases, or state that certain actions, events or results «may,» «could,» «would,» «might» or «will» be taken, occur or be achieved.
Trump has often used that phrase in private, White House advisors told the Times.
But her acceptance speech last night struck me, because she used a phrase that is so often abused.
Besides identifying the most effective opening phrase, it turns out the study also examined the closing phrases people often use, and came up with a best practice there, too: a simple three - word phrase that prompted a much higher response rate than other, more common closings.
Using the phrase «Learn More» within a CTA is often more effective than just submit, because «Learn More» indicates that their participation will offer something in return and humans will naturally want to see what that is.
The thing is that business owners are often just as guilty when it comes to using phrases they think mean one thing but are not entirely appropriate for the situation in which they are being used.
It's a phrase Woods has often used when asked about ever getting back to that No. 1 ranking, but we all know what it really is, right?
nWomen use hedge phrases such as «I believe» or «It seems to me» more often than men.
Thomas Mulcair has often used the phrase «we're destabilizing the balance economy we've built up since the Second World War.»
Advanced and developing economies have done a good job managing the implications of unconventional monetary policies, she said, using a phrase that often describes asset purchases by a central bank to support growth.
The Most Hated Rally in History A Financial Times article on March 2 examined the post-financial crisis bull market and contained the phrase we have used to title this section.1 The article discusses a theme we have often stated, ``... that many investors have simply not believed in a stock market rally fueled by central banks» easy money policies.»
I began to use this phrase quite often afterwards, adding that why customers buy is equally important, but the origins and credit really belongs with Dan Henson.
This approach also ignores the fact that the Reformation itself was an age of great patristic ressourcement, to use a phrase often associated with the Second Vatican Council.
people really need to study the bible — not for Christianity sake but for theirs - the athiest would like everyone to understand them and used this phrase — But when I explain that atheism is central to my worldview — that I am in awe of the natural world and that I believe it is up to human beings, instead of a divine force, to strive to address our problems — they often better understand my views, even if we don't agree.
In the latter decades of the twentieth century, the phrase liberation theology often has been used synonymously with Latin American liberation theology.
Each of the three will denote the good for a human individual.1 Because of its long association with the liberal tradition, «interest» is so often used to mean an individual's private happiness that the phrase «private view of interest» may seem redundant.
Quotation marks can be used to indicate a different meaning of a word or phrase other than the one typically associated with it and are often used to express irony.
(Entweder - Oder: a phrase of Kierkegaard often used by the crisis theologians.)
There has, however, often been a tendency in the church to sanctify a particular phrase or title and to use that as a touchstone of orthodoxy.
The very phrase, a «philosophy of organism,» used by Whitehead so often to capture the tenor of his approach, remains a challenge to attend to the interconnectedness and interdependence which deserves to be appreciated as contributing substantively to any organic whole.
One can certainly detect, for instance, a growing skepticism toward «modernity» in the form of master narratives and instrumental reason, possibly because Latin America has so often had a painful experience of these narratives and the exercise of such reason — experiencing them from the «reverse side of history,» to use Gutiérrez's apt phrase.
We might use the phrase, but we often have little idea about what it actually means.
Separation between church and state is a phrase often used to summarize, perhaps to sloganize, the relationship between religion and government envisioned by the founders and decreed by them in the religion clause of the First Amendment.
We used to hear very often the phrase «building the Kingdom.»
Most often, Artigas is careful to use such guarded phrases as «is coherent with» when describing how a particular feature of the world relates to the belief that that world is the product of a divine Mind.
Because they were not well equipped to deal with the intellectual challenges posed by modernism, fundamentalists withdrew from mainstream seminaries and secular universities, frequently adopting an anti-intellectual, populist stance that, to use Carpenter's phrase, «often took the form of railing against one's enemies before an audience of one's friends.»
The phrase «insh» Allah — «if God wills it» is common, just as some Christians often used to say «Deus vult» (d.v.) Yet this does not mean that human behaviour is pre-determined, although at one time there were heated debates on the subject.
First of all, responsible liturgical revision can not consist only in the use of more contemporary language or in the avoidance of what are known as «sexist» phrases (which are so dominantly masculine that women often feel excluded from what is going on) or in a return to biblical idiom to replace other (perhaps medieval) terminology.
He urged his readers not to concentrate on the doctrinal statements which they mocked, but on a «sense and taste for the Infinite», or, in a phrase that he often used, on «a feeling of absolute dependence.»
It is hard for this generation to understand a phrase like «those wise restraints that make men free,» perhaps because such phrases too often have been used as part of a con game to get youth to buy the illusions of middle age.
Bonhoeffer very often uses the phrase «participating in the suffering of God in the world».
The phrase «liquid modernity» is often used, but it can feel more like evaporating modernity.
The New Testament way of summing up these realities of the Christian church's life is in the phrase so often used by Paul, «the Body of Christ.»
That phrase has been used too often to justify the speaker's own sin.
The decision between these two possibilities is complicated by the fact that whereas there can be little question that Jesus used the phrase «son of man,» (The ground for this assurance is not merely the Gospel testimony that Jesus used the phrase; it is rather that it appears so often on his lips and nowhere else.
and all the accounts of his teaching in the Synoptic Gospels are so filled with the phrase that we can not question its importance for Jesus — the more so as the infrequency of its appearance in the Epistles would indicate that it was not used especially often in the early church.
In our Bible we often read such beautiful phrases as: «Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you and pray for them that despitefully use you».
Too often this phrase refers primarily to fluency in the use of the religious vocabulary and / or saying the things laymen like to hear.
«Entity» may be the most plausible English equivalent, though Whitehead often uses it more broadly and thus prefers the phrase «actual entity» when referring to his basic ontological unit.
A crutch word is essentially a word or phrase that is used too often and often incorrectly.
Altogether too often prayer is regarded as a kind of gadget by which we can secure what we wish from God; it is, alas, a matter of «pestering the Deity with our petitions,» to use a biting phrase of Dean Inge's.
It is this second clause to which that other common phrase, «religious freedom,» refers, a phrase that has often been used to sum up the American teaching about religion.
In their writings the phrase used most often to depict what one strives for in life's daily struggles was «purity of heart.»
When young people who wished to convey the idea that something was superlatively good, splendid, and real («That's for real», they also said — and it is a significant phrase), they would often use these words: «It's out of this world».
The second consideration is that as the individual develops in his life of prayer, he will find that petition for material advantage is less and less a part of his asking, and that more and more he desires only that he may be conformed to God's Will, so that as Christ's Spirit is formed in him he is enabled to live as un autre Christ — that fine phrase which was so often used by French devotional writers in the seventeenth century.
(I was, of course, only illustrating that new things * do * exist and therefore that phrase you quoted is being used way too loosely — as I've often seen done.)
Shane Claiborne put it this way: «' Leaving things in God's hands is an often abused and quaint phrase that many seem to think means «don't bother with doing anything, because Jesus will come someday and undo all your work anyway»... Leaving things in God's hands» should rather be used to mean «do what Jesus did.»
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