Sentences with phrase «so sentimental»

Who knew he would be so sentimental over a dresser:)
The art gallery is so sentimental now.
I would be feeling so sentimental about our «little blog that could» that I would run all around town trying to find an old section of a picket fence to put on my mantel.
I hear you... my son's are older now (23 & 27) and I have been so sentimental lately!
These cute Christmas mugs are so sentimental.
Awesome ideas, some of them had me all choked up they are so sentimental and sweet!
I love that your mom is recorded on your blog telling you this beautiful wisdom, so sentimental and sweet.
Awww, you're so sentimental.
We are so sentimental around here... I love keeping lists and notes that the boys write for me.
Director Jason Reitman is known for smart, sassy films such as Young Adult and Up In The Air, so this sentimental melodrama is a surprise.
There's a sweeping romanticism to the premise, but it's ultimately so sentimental...
I am so sentimental that I just have to keep old photos lying around in my computer, collecting virtual dust But it's always a lot of fun to rediscover old memories and snapshots.
And it must feel so sentimental Looking lovely as always as well dear xx
Before the era of technology, people didn't have photographs or other ways to keep each other close, so sentimental jewellery pieces like lockets (cameos would be another example) became a common way for loved ones to remember each other.
It's effient and so sentimental.
Omg, wedding photos make me so sentimental and these are gorgeous!
Sorry for being so sentimental about it, but truth is, this is the way I feel about him.
There's something so sentimental about it.
I am so sentimental that way!
I would be feeling so sentimental about our «little blog that could» that I would run all around town trying to find an old section of a picket fence to put on my mantel.
That expiry is beyond upsetting and feels like I am giving away something so sentimental and special, just because.
I won't commend you on this acticle, you are so sentimental on the part of eboue, you are still furious on the incident that happened at tortemham and you don't want him to play against sun or any other match for the team you are so bias.
I miss him but I'm getting on a bit now so the sentimental side of things is a bit skewiff if you know what i mean.
I do nt see Chelsea fans be so sentimental with their player and Cesc joining them.
Nick Saban wouldn't be so sentimental.
There's something so sentimental about it.
The indications are that many of them came to theological study with a religion so sentimental or so narrowly Christ - centered that it had left them without answers to their deepest questions about the reason for their existence, about the meaning of human tragedy, and the significance of mankind's history.
But in Christian circles people made fun of me for being so sentimental.
another point which I feel deserves mention is that most entrepreneurs get so sentimental about their projects etc..

Not exact matches

«So I wouldn't put anything of irreplaceable sentimental value on it.»
«Just bear in mind that there is a good chance this monster rocket blows up,» Musk reportedly told Plait in an email, «so I wouldn't put anything of irreplaceable sentimental value on it.»
«Just bear in mind that there is a good chance this monster rocket blows up, so I wouldn't put anything of irreplaceable sentimental value on it.»
Pornography... is essentially sentimental, for it leaves out the connection of sex with its hard purpose, and so far disconnects it from its meaning in life as to make it simply an experience for its own sake.
My grandparents» worked at Sears nearly their entire lives, and so it's a sentimental choice.
But at least she gets this right: «Brideshead mattered so much to Evelyn because he put so much of himself into it: his distance from his father, his sentimental education of Oxford, his early love affairs, his initiation into the aristocratic world of the Lygons [model for the novel's Marchmain family], his conversion to Roman Catholicism, his abortive love affair with the Army....
Lutherans today are both more sophisticated and more liturgically minded than they were in my youth and so they are less tolerant of the sentimental nineteenth - century gospel songs that for so long dominated Protestant hymnody, but they will now and then allow those of us at mid-life or beyond to sing again the songs we grew up with but which more informed tastes tell us (and we try to tell ourselves) we should not have liked as much as we did.
The shallow novelty, the low - cost nihilism, and the vague and sentimental spiritual pretensions of so much contemporary art — in every medium — are the legacy of this schism, as well as the cynicism that pervades the arts world.
On the other hand, the notion of God as sentimental niceness — what I have called «smothering love» — springs from the wish of many people to be so completely tolerant that they are unwilling or unable to take a stand on anything.
Reinhold Niebuhr is less dualistic in that he stresses the relevance of love as an «impossible possibility» to every human situation, but he warns so continually against a sentimental substitution of love for the requirements of justice that the major impact of his thought is a dichotomy in which again justice, and not love, is the determining principle of social ethics.
His aim is so to bring the Christian perspective into the concrete political and social experience of modern life that the possibility of achieving justice and brotherhood in human affairs will be increased because men are in some measure freed from the sentimental and romantic notions which can only lead to bitter disillusionment.
Perhaps the commonest expression of this assumption that spiritual value is undone if lowly origin be asserted is seen in those comments which unsentimental people so often pass on their more sentimental acquaintances.
If I really thought that we were so hopelessly evil as you say, then I could only assume that Jesus was a bit of a sentimental fool for his sacrificial act.
Watching the Chicago Cubs battle to their first World Series championship since 1908, I sensed my latent sentimental streak for the game's early days returning, so I picked up a copy of Lawrence S. Ritter's The Glory of Their Times.
I bring the conversation up because it came to mind last week when I was reading about a Christian ethicist so passionately committed to defending the (unmistakably) exceptional nature of human beings that he thinks it necessary to forbid his children any sentimental solicitude for the suffering of beasts, and to disabuse them of the least trace of the dangerous fantasy or pathetic fallacy that animals experience anything analogous to human emotions, motives, or needs; they can not really, he insists, know anxiety, grief, regret, or disappointment, and so we should never allow them to divert our sympathies or ethical longings from their proper object.
So when something upsetting happens to them against their will, rather than get consciously angry, mean, manipulative or deceitful, they drive these unpleasant thoughts and feelings deep underground and cover it all in a sentimental spirituality laced with ultimate concern for the church, God's will, and mission.
In fact I tend to resist doing so - lots of information about visions, and ecstasies, and hours spent in prayer, often written in a very sentimental style, can be rather irritating.
We are sentimental about pets because we are unwilling to welcome human life — or so says Pope Francis.
With this understanding of what it means to learn the Truth, the fact that I have been instructed by Socrates or by Prodicus or by a servant - girl, can concern me only historically; or in so far as lam a Plato in sentimental enthusiasm, it may concern me poetically.
He sought to avoid, and rightly so, any facile or sentimental deference to religion.
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