Yet, couples therapy tends still to be conducted in
the purely verbal realm, focused on the words of each partner's individual story, while neglecting the body's vast potential for emotional and spiritual expression.
«We found that behavioral actions — rather than
purely verbal expressions — triggered more consensus as indicators of love.
Conflict is
purely verbal.
If Ariza physically entered the locker room, it was brief, and regardless, the encounter was
purely verbal.
Together with the principle that in God's revelation no word is without significance this conception of scripture leads to an atomistic exegesis, which interprets sentences, clauses, phrases, and even single words, independently of the context of the historical occasion, as divine oracles; combines them with other similarly detached utterances; and makes large use of analogy of expressions, often by
purely verbal association.
This is
a purely verbal expression, used to identify Elsewhere, the Inaccessible, the Beyond [or the Very Deep], rather than a place.)
Not exact matches
This tends to diminish the importance of
verbal relationships as a decisive factor in themselves, and to emphasize the importance of more
purely theological factors.
The director's
verbal digressions (he's as much a motormouth as his characters are) usually serve
purely to establish character depth, most notably in the gratuity debate in Reservoir Dogs (in his next life, Mr. Pink was reincarnated as a mediocre waiter) and the foot massage debate in Pulp Fiction which concludes with the meta - aside, «C'm on, let's get into character.»
The
verbal additions encourage viewers to think about the sculptures holistically, to see them in a broad socioeconomic context rather than as isolated,
purely aesthetic confections.
11 years as physician with a PhD as a Cardiologist with expertise in both invasive and non-invasive treatment for first the first 5 years and is now almost
purely working as a interventional cardiologist Excellent
verbal and written communication skills in English and German
Brian Coughlin, PsyD, a Los Angeles — based psychologist with a focus on trauma and addiction, notes that in
verbal abuse, a constructive element to the criticism is missing; someone is being
purely critical of another person, acting out in anger, and using words to try to control them.