Sentences with phrase «quite get it right»

After years of upholding a model whereby a hundred believers send one of their number to «go be a missionary» on a foreign piece of geography, it's not easy to admit that we didn't quite get it right.
I started making them a few weeks ago (as a result of reading your blog) and I haven't quite got the right look down.
I tried it once and loved the flavor but didn't quite get the right texture.
The Dwight Howard - era Magic never quite got it right, and the would - be Clipper Big 3 never got out of the second round.
But instinct, this season, hasn't quite got it right.
It was my first Diamond League so a really good experience but I am still not quite getting it right.
Having a bottle that can tell you if you are holding it at the right angle is beneficial if you just can't quite get it right and want a little insurance that baby's hiccups will peter out.
Neither Democrat Vincent Gentile nor Green Partier James Lane quite got it right in their response, however.
Just as scientists writing on policy don't quite get it right.
Unfortunately they haven't quite gotten the right formula down.
I've never quite gotten them right along the way and now I know why!
It was a design I had in my head for a while but couldn't quite get right.
More than any previous Marvel movie, Infinity War emphasizes the clashing egos between Banner and Hulk, whose relationship is less man / werewolf and more Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, something the Marvel films never quite got right.
But it's clear that Google Plus hasn't quite got it right yet either.
Today we didn't quite get it right, but the No. 3 car did, and they're the pole position winners which is great for them.»
The 208 offers something typically different in exterior and interior styling and after not quite getting it right in the 207 model we reckon Peugeot might just have the bark to match its bite this time around.
Since I drove my first Prius many years ago, the technology has gotten dramatically better in some cars, while others never quite got it right.
Like I said, it's a small detail, but one that even Apple's iBooks and Google Play Books doesn't manage to quite get right.
It's understandable, therefore, that despite the raging success stories from self - published bestsellers such as E.L. James and Rachel Abbott, a lot of authors don't quite get it right (just take a look at the Kindle Cover Disasters blog).
Don't get me wrong, I'm a big supporter of a lot of motion controls (thought SS was great) but TP didn't quite get it right on its attempt.
Right now it seems that games haven't quite gotten it right, even if there are an increasing number of examples where love is being better represented.
This is something 999 never quite gets right.
This is exactly the kind of sequel the franchise has been begging for for two decades, and the kind of Sonic experience Sega has tried to create themselves in the past, but couldn't quite get right (Sonic Generations was probably their best attempt).
Most don't quite get it right, but we like Acer's take.
Adjust the exposure compensation: Exposure compensation lets you lighten or darken a scene when the automatic metering doesn't quite get it right or produce the results you want.
HTC has redesigned theri flagship series for the past few years and never quite got it right.
There's almost certainly a terrific 360 - degree Zenbook in our future, but the Asus ZenBook Flip UX360CA is likely to be remembered as the slightly awkward model that didn't quite get it right.
But both the Moto Z and Moto Z Force stand out first and foremost with a new approach to the modular smartphone concept Lenovo feels LG didn't quite get right.

Not exact matches

This area is quite popular with new builders right now because it's cheaper to get in, says Pon.
Stein tells clients to get familiar with the goods they're buying and be wary of those that arrive with not - quite - right logos, missing labels or poorly printed packaging.
We're not sure quite how Chen got all those titles on the right, but it's incredible anyway:
Not all of them have been right, but we've gotten it right quite a lot.
Lola's still quite a few years away from college and getting a job, but we thought we'd ask what some of the career options are for kids who are interested in careers involving animals and animal rights.
And, if I didn't quite get the law right, or misinterpreted what the judge said, neither of which was unusual, I always had Posner or one of my other colleagues at the Law School to straighten me out.
Few startups get it quite right.
Investing in bitcoin can be quite tricky, especially when identifying the right time to get in.
You're not citing the context, and quite frankly, if a lot of Christian's get the CONTEXT wrong, you stand NO chance of getting it right.
Some of the people in religious groups who are so sure they are right actually committ actions so anti-religious it makes one wonder how they got there... and it was actually quite easy — they figured it all out.
Begin by getting right down to the radical nitty - gritty and quite simply exchange the word prayer for another word: time.
And the Church in the 20th century hadn't always got its language and style right: Casti Connubii in the 1930s says wise and true things about marriage and family life, but didn't somehow quite manage to tackle the emerging questions being raised by women as educational opportunities for them expanded and new responsibilities cametheir way in public, commercial, and professional life.
Perhaps we have never gotten it quite right, and never will.
As a person attending a multicultural church in Memphis, I would say that this article almost gets it right, but it's not quite the entire story.
Even that formulation doesn't get it quite right, however.
The Economist presents itself as a definitive source for news and interpretation, so it would help if it wasn't quite so tendentious when writing about the Catholic Church and was a little more careful to get its facts right.
Quite interesting — isn't it, Tom that Douglas and Diai's posts tend to come out right around when Chad gets to continue his other ongoing discussions?
So Lambda and its allies are quite right to believe that, in getting the government to declare that millennia of classical, Jewish, and Christian teaching on homosexuality is nothing more than prejudice, «gay people have found far more success in the courts than in Congress» — or in any other institution with a measure of accountability to the American people.
What one finds art may be objectionable to another, but it does not give any one the right to destroy it.It is getting quite absurd they tactics religious zealots are taking in this country,, to book banning's and book burning's.
It is EXACTLY the situation that we face in our church right now, and as such has been very helpful in getting some of the leadership team who currently feel quite beaten down to laugh at the essential truth of the same situation, thus making it easier to work to change.
WORLD: Sorry once again, but science does not know everything or the quantum part would be figured out in finite terms rather than probabilities that's sound like we spent millions of dollars to get answers like «but teacher I was almost right, let me try some more»... and pre-big bang theories would be figured out and not quite as fantastical and humorous as they sound to average person.
But received wisdom is there because it was as close to a «right» judgment as previous people could get given the information available to them at the time... information which was quite nearly as complete as ours when it comes to daily life.
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