Sentences with phrase «so little point»

But Mr. Berg's listless direction brings the film so little point of view that it doesn't much matter who lives or dies.

Not exact matches

«And so from that point on — at first it was very exciting, we were getting our first orders — and it was a little terrifying,» Krim said.
The city is at the point where a not - insignificant portion of residents are rooting for the so - called tech bubble to implode at least a little, the New York Times reported earlier this month.
He focused on how Comey called Trump and his staff «liars,» saying that Comey «thought so little of President - Elect Trump's first briefing reaction he started documenting everything» and pointing out that Comey «gave a first person account of an obstruction narrative.»
Okay, so maybe I was a little hard on my husband up to that point.
And despite so - called stimulus spending totalling nearly three - quarters of a trillion dollars, he points out that there is still very little momentum in the world's largest economy.
So at some point, as that supply comes off, that supply - demand balance becomes a little bit more natural.»
What to do instead: It makes people feel good to be complimented, so pointing out a piece of work or a post on their social media profile that you enjoyed gives your message a little something extra.
So there's little point in refining near the wellhead.
It's a little premature to say a rally is on, but oil prices are going to have to rise at some point with so much production currently underwater.
So since this is my turf, I'll do a little cherry picking focused on a few touch points that impact how we live our lives and function in the trenches of marketing.
With so little time left in the year, many wonder whether bitcoin can still break $ 800, a feat that still looks at least marginally possible at one point.
«Plant - based protein is growing almost, at this point, a little faster than animal - based, so I think the migration may continue in that direction.»
So, generally, the biggest deltas are, one, a little bit weaker on the handset side; two, a little more conservative modeling of what happens later in the year than what we had, which frankly is not, again, just to drive that point home, nobody knows how many people are going to buy a new handset when it's launched on the market — not us, not our customers, not analysts, or you name it.
So it's a combination of having new dishes that are a little more accessible from a price point standpoint, additional media and incremental traffic, all of which is going to help maintain.
«We're not out seeking capital at this point and time, so we're growing ourselves a little organically.
So at some point I suspect we are going to see inflation start to pick up a little bit.
So ideally, the Fed's stimulus could get the economy back to a normal rate of growth before inflation becomes a problem, at which point the Fed could taper off its bond buying little by little and gracefully exit the picture.
But when we are having a dialogue about this stuff, tell me how can I get my point of view across, like, I believe that being gay is a choice, and then use what many, many others use to defend their so - called choice, little girls.
My only issue is that sometimes he gets a little too aggressive which I think detracts from some of the points he tries to make because it's dripping with so much bias it's hard not to disagree on principle.
Whenever a discussion of alcohol comes up among members of my congregation, and someone mentions the story about Jesus turning water into wine for his first public miracle, one point is inevitably made: that the wine back then was watered down so much it had little or no alcoholic content, making it barely more than grape juice.
Try to do it when I'm around, though, so I can point out exactly how often christians lie for their silly little delusion.
I even find myself a little mystified by why it was such a big deal back in the day, telling myself, «Well, of course they were going to reconcile at some point, and in certain strategic and economy terms they already had, so why the big fuss?
So you think those little points give leave to the completely divisive nature, and dominionist atti.tude that most religion promotes, especially the abrahamic ones?
But Israel is America's little puppet so they get away with anything at this point.
I would point out however... that it is you who is claiming an absolute definition for the word so, perhaps while you wait for my «exegetical evidence», you might provide a little of your own substantiating your usage of the term?
Just a little note but it was not the passover meal Jesus was having it was the Last supper at that point in time and by the word it was command that no yeast was to be within the house for passover so the last supper it the last day to eat yeast bread and to eat all of it so that the house was clean.
Clive, you point out how others often don't understand what Jesus was saying; but while Jesus often labors to try and make things clear to the unbeliever («Oh, you of little faith) or at the very least the author tries to make it clear for us in retrospect (At the time they didn't understand that he spoke of this...), in this case Jesus switches from something that might be figurative to essentially say «no, I seriously mean this» and it concludes not with Jesus saying «don't go away, this is what I actually mean» but confirming that people would refuse to accept that God intended for them to actually fill themselves with the life that He offered so they stopped following him.
HotAirAce - I have a little time, so let me school you, Infinity has a starting point which is it's reference point, because of this infinity can be devisible by it self, which is I / I = 1.
My point is that we know so very little about our universe that I can say «at the moment nothing we know of is eternal» while at the same time understanding that the universe could be like that electron and wink in and out of existence in some constant renewal, from singularity to singularity and back again, but because we only see a tiny fragment of the process we can only make sloppy assumptions as to the mechanics involved.
But the point is not to add a little more optimism to balance so much pessimism.
Jeremy and Glenn — I don't think that Brian would say he doesn't believe in absolute truth — I could be wrong but I think he would say something like... he doesn't believe that any human has (at least up to this point) been able to know absolute truth and that he believes there is a lot more of absolute truth to be known and that he doesn't believe that it is as narrow or «little» as so many try to make it.
Not only does the testimony of Christ and, after him, the testimony of the disciples, receive a new light by being placed under the sign of the great trial, so also does all the Johannine «pneumatology» of testimony, about which very little has been said to this point, except to recognize in it the extreme internalization of testimony.
Can anyone point me to another person famous for having married little girls and killing scores of people and relying upon their delusions of some imaginary sky daddy to do so?
Moreover, if the points of my little article are so «insubstantial» and «irrelevant,» then why all the unseemly rage?
Christian faith is so much faith and so little sight that its adherents are always seeking for some demonstration which will prove to themselves and others that it is true, though the demonstration is bound to be somewhat beside the point — like most miracles — proving not truth but utility, and exhibiting a power which may be that of God, but may also be that of faith itself, or of spiritual forces somewhat less than divine.
I was a little nervous about some of the parables but every not so clear verse should be looked at in the light of very clear verse and those point to your / my new belief.
But there is little consideration of any point of view other than the human one even though the goal is so to change human perception that it will no longer attribute to itself a special position in the scheme of things.
Now I don't believe it and am much happier and things make a little more sense so your point is completely wrong.
Two percentages points seems like so little, although given the size....
Maybe you two should take this out to the playground.C «mon!A little off point but, what is so appealing about heaven?Sounds like a scary place to me.
I introduce here, both for a little «light relief» and because it makes my point so accurately, a poem by Rolfe Humphries which he entitled Hell.
As a skilful cook says of a dish in which there are already a great many ingredients: «It still needs just a little pinch of cinnamon» (and we perhaps could hardly tell by the taste that this little pinch of spice had been added, but she knew precisely why and precisely how it affected the taste of the whole mixture); as an artist says with a view to the color effect of a whole painting which is composed of many, many, colors: «There and there, at that little point, it needs a touch of red» (and we perhaps could hardly even discover the red, so carefully has the artist shaded it, although he knows exactly why it should be introduced).
I received my review copy of Sarah Bessey's Out of Sorts at the lowest, most exhausting point in my pregnancy and so I never got around to writing an endorsement, which killed me a little because Sarah is such a kindred spirit.
But for the skeptic or the atheist who might be drawn to the park out of curiosity, there is little to make them stop and think about the point of it all: Jesus, our savior who left heaven, came down to earth, lived a sinless existence, and died so that we may have life abundantly.
And don't worry about little fvckwads like Open Mouth who can't debate one little point of yours and so they bring up a mistake from yesterday or some stupid sh!t..
Dan and I were vacationing there with friends, and I'd arrived at our designated meeting point a little early so I could «pray and meditate» [read: drink my first cup of coffee without having to talk to anyone].
There is so much for all of us that hides Jesus from us — the church itself hides him, all the hoopla of church with ministers as lost in the thick of it as everybody else so that the holiness of it somehow vanishes away to the point where services of worship run the risk of becoming only a kind of performance — on some Sundays better, on some Sundays worse — and only on the rarest occasions does anything strike to the quick the way that little girl's cry did with every last person who heard her realizing that Jesus didn't show for any of them — the mystery and miracle of Jesus with all his extraordinary demands upon us, all his extraordinary promises.
«To the little flock» (a quotation from the New Testament) he wrote explaining his absence, his position which had led to so much criticism from authority, and outlined for their benefit all that had happened, copying at one point a style used by St Paul when rebutting his critics.
The point is that most people did not feel personally threatened by large auto - death statistics and so there was little inducement to slow down; but when people paid drastically higher prices for gas, and were threatened with having no gas, they took the threats to their money and mobility seriously, and slowed down.
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