It can also be used to describe
a profound wrong doing.
Not exact matches
Is it
wrong that I don't want to invite (much less demand) that either Julie or Tony air their most
profound, intimate pain in this public forum in order to have a conversation about theology and abuse?
The people in its misery has obeyed the law of necessity and
done wrong, but God has
profound pity on the man who is brought down thus.
In 2006, when the New York State Court of Appeals shamefully ruled that the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) community
did not have equal protection under the law in relation to Marriage Equality, I predicted that passing legislation to right this
wrong in the State Senate would be a
profound personal and sadly political battle.
Contrary to what Michael Dyson asserts, «
profound resegregation of American schools» has not happened; «telling differences between how much money suburban and urban schools spend on each student»
do not exist; African American dropout rates are not 17 percent (but closer to the 50 percent figure that Cosby is accused of getting
wrong); and the existence of the phenomenon of «acting white,» far from being «a theory that is in large part untrue,» has been affirmed by a major new study.
Don't get me
wrong; I understand that it is a very real trend that is having a
profound impact in pet stores across the country — and around the world.
Q18 Lord Lawson of Blaby: Are you aware that this, which has had a very
profound influence on thinking, is explicitly stated in the Government's White Paper to be based on proxy data, whatever proxy data may be, because there are no instrumental observations, they
did not begin until the late 19th century, and that for these proxy data, which it says in small writing at the bottom, that the IPCC relies entirely on a study by a Professor Mann in 1998 and this has subsequently been examined and it was found that that Mr Mann got it all
wrong in a rather fundamental way.
Come learn
profound pearls of wisdom like - «Don't go the
wrong way down a one - way street!»