Sentences with phrase «see more comments»

Wishing you continued success and you may just see more comments from me in the future.
Hope see you more comments of city overcomsuption, overproduction, overpopulation, and bad leaders in the world.
Expect to see more comments like yours following the revelation that X1 will not have any exclusives anymore.
First off, this is an article targeting writers, but I see more comments from editors.
So be prepared to see more comments from me!
So, expect to see more comments like this because it will serve the dual purpose of trying to weaken Gillibrand for the general election while also making Long's case that she is the best candidate to take on the Senator.
I would still love to see more comment contributors provide YouTube messages as a way to personalize the exchanges here.

Not exact matches

Don't be afraid to experiment; you won't figure out your audience right away, but if you try different things and then monitor your data and evaluate the comments, likes, etc., that will help you determine what your audience appreciates — and wants to see more of.
Matias» Reddit study, conducted over 29 days during which he and Reddit moderators screened 2,214 discussions on the science forum, found that by making rules easy to see (via «sticky comments,» as they are called on Reddit), Reddit users were 7.3 % «more likely to follow the rules.»
Apple's comment: «The hosts» call - it - like - they - see - it sports talk made PMT our perfect companion through the Olympics, the World Series, and more
Citi's comments come as oil prices have recovered from a plunge in 2014 with the bank seeing the first stop for the rally at about US$ 65 a barrel, around 25 % more than current price levels.
In a statement, the Foundation said it should have been more transparent, but added that it can't «comment on events that allegedly occurred 60 years ago, and on documents we have never seen
In fact, in our experience at Influence & Co., videos on Facebook receive higher engagement; we see more people commenting on them, and they get more likes and more shares.
As a result, people may start seeing a few more stories returning to their feed with new comments highlighted.
And we see more and more advertisers willing to leave the comments open on sponsored posts.
(For more such comments from 2001, as well as some quite different recent comments by Senator Grassley and the Administration, see the box below.)
We didn't spot a clear pattern that indicated more or less satisfaction with one type over another, though we did see some user comments saying that the dial on the latter is easily jostled if you move about.
See the March 6, 2006 comment (Cost of Hedging) and the April 18, 2005 comment (How Hedging Works) for more detail on the mechanics of a hedged investment position.
When drafting posts, comments, and responses, always take a second look to see if you can make your content even more concise.
You can see more in the comments of the article.
(Search this site for articles on Risk in investment if you want more, or see my comments on the attempt last year to Debunk Buffett by applying fully half - a-dozen «explanations» to his results.
He said Tuesday that he would have liked to see more progress on the issue in the year that has passed since he first made those comments.
If you are interested in a more detailed discussion of forks, see this thread for a previous version of this post discussing it at even more length and the comments for a discussion of this with the r / tax community.
We're unlikely to see anything more specific than such guarded comments, suggestions, and speculation until OPEC's next meeting, due to take place in November.
For more on discounted dividends, see the September 12, 2005 comment, The S&P 500 as a Stream of Payments.
I've been acting as a bit of a fly on the wall of this blog for a few weeks now, but I saw this cartoon, felt my heart break, read the comments, felt my heart break even more, slept on it, woke up with a still - aching heart, and so thought it appropriate that I break my silence.
As representated by your comment, it's far more common these days to see bigotry and intolerance towards people of faith,
I should have been more clear that I was quoting him as I see it could easily look like that was my comment.
The hope one might have once placed in comparative advantage global capitalism and the internet / cell - phone wiring of all, began to look increasingly hollow, as Walmarts filled with cheap Chinese goods, real jobs went missing, real skills became rare, and the internet became known not so much for an Army of Davids shoring up our common commitment to liberty, but for mobbish comment swarms, porn, The Social Network, diversion all - the - more addictive for being personally tailored (see: the fictional fat - slobs of Wall - E, or the perpetually downward phone - gaze of our «dumb» millennials), and unprecedented possibilities for spying, defamation, and demagogic manipulation for those with access to big data.
Common people, I saw that my comment upset you enough to reply to me, but not one of you could share a candidate that you prefer, or structure an argument as to why they have more experience than Romney to pull our country out of this mess?
I know you are pretty much supporting my comment, and I don't mean to be rude, but I think Baden's exclusion of the Islamic approach is much more egregious than his non-mention of the Christian approach — seeing as half of the conflict he is discussing is driven mainly by Islamic people and Islamically - oriented ideology.
You comment more than any other person I see on these boards.
Just as a point of clarification to Bill's post above, while I welcome what I thinkis a imporant point we should al keep in mind I would in no way ever see myself as an important part of the conversation more a present somewhat comenting bystander although my ego was very flattered when I read Bill's comment
Wendy: I never saw the nasty name comment (I can't do more than skim the vitriol on here at the best of times).
I thought about that comment as I saw the first few photos from Lisa's birth on Facebook, and with Josh and Annie's permission, I thought I'd share that comment with you once more.
Having being on the receiving end of the «man - hater» comment more times than I can count, seeing it listed as number one — in the form of «I like white males so much I married one» — rubbed me the wrong way.Being called a man - hater is often unfairly used as a way to silence women and dismiss their arguments outright, which is troubling, especially when it happens in the midst of a theological discussion.
I'm glad to see you are honest about it ROCKWOOD, but I think this comment — «The Muslim influx is a bit more difficult for me to accept, but I often pray that I have the ability to accept them as much as I accept other religions, or concpets of relgions such as Atheism, and Agnosticism..»
I am saddened to see all of these comments, and more saddened to see believers turning away from church.
As more and more people become frustrated with their governments and life in general they tend to look for more «civil» ways to protest and as we all can see just from this one article and its comments, Islam is a very heated subject and the militant are looooooooving it.
You have probably seen Sam comment on several posts over the past month or so, and after hearing some about what he is doing in San Diego, I wanted to hear more, and I know that many of you do to.
But more to the point, if you look around Belief Blog and other sites, you'll see that there's no shortage of disparaging comments targeting Islam and it's Prophet (ridicule be upon him).
Actually, if you read some of Leah's more recent blog posts and comments, you can see that she is no longer dating the Catholic man to which you are referring.
One final comment: The assumption of protopsychic matter is no more revolutionary than our epistemological knowledge that all objects which we see have no color, because color only arises in sense cells and brain.
I hear more terroristic comments coming from my fellow americans than I see from any muslim... It's sad what you have become.
I like this comment you made: > I believe that John, in his Gospel, is trying to get people to see that Jesus is God, and is possibly trying to instill more meaning in the terms «Christ» and «Son of God» than the average person in the first century would have understood or immediately grasped.
What i see in these comments are Atheists being much more up front and honest with what they believe, even if it comes of sounding harsh.
Oh, and one more quick comment: anyone see the irony in the fact that an ancient tool of execution, upon which thousands of innocent people were tortured to death, is now used to decorate, and show devotion?
I'm going to make this my last comment on this thread, not because talking about this in the way this conversation has gone is upsetting for me but I just don't see the point of talking any more with the way it has gone.
These suggest a vision which revealed Jesus in his heavenly glory at the right hand of the divine throne, not unlike that seen by the martyr Stephen when he looked up to heaven and «saw the glory of God, and Jesus standing at God's right hand».47 So Goguel comments, «When we consider the part played by the faith in the resurrection in Paul's religious life and thought as a result of Christ's appearance to him, we see that most essential to his faith was not the feeling that Jesus had returned to the environment of his life on earth preceding his passion but a belief in his glorification, i.e. in his transition to life in heaven where death has no more dominion over him.»
Furthermore, the people with whom I've interacted do not make a representative sample — and I've seen some much more troubling comments from Trump supporters around the country.
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