Sentences with phrase «someone suggest such a thing»

How could anyone suggest such a thing?
A guy on Facebook blew up about this, leaving comment after comment after comment about how ridiculous it was to suggest such a thing.
I know some people would think it scandalous to even suggest such a thing, but is that not how the God of the Bible seems to work?
To suggest such a thing PROVES how worthless this low life pastor and his religion really are!!!
I also seem to remember that pints of Guinness were once recommended, but I could not afford those in my college days and nobody would dare suggest such a thing now.
Ozil has 3 goals and 16 assists whereas Silva has 1 goals and 7 assists and Ozil has been widely lauded as one of the best EPL players of the season whereas NOBODY is suggesting any such thing about Silva.
(This is certainly not an attempt to jinx Arsenal into a relegation battle, and we're shocked that you could even suggest such a thing.)
Why would you even suggest such a thing?
far be it from me to suggest such a thing.
Only a fool (or a tool) would suggest such a thing.
Later that evening his wife called and gave me a long dressing - down for suggesting such a thing.
The federal gas tax of 18.4 cents per gallon hasn't increased since 1993 — largely because even suggesting such a thing, most lawmakers believe, is political suicide.
Surely he would never suggest such a thing.
(While cynics will wonder how the dog was able to consume so much of the police car so quickly, and speculate the officer was napping, we would never suggest such a thing.)
Call of Duty developer, Infinity Ward suggested such a thing recently to OXM, as COD's...
Others told me they were outraged that I even suggested such a thing.
I only mention that because it is essential not to sugarcoat an image of a cute little old lady artist, she'd have bent you like that piece of rebar for suggesting such a thing.
That article suggested no such thing.
But I don't think that qualifies as «pseudoscience,» which to me suggests such things as controversial hypotheses masquerading as self - evident assumptions («ordered complexity implies a designer»), or outright fallacies of inference and errors of fact, perhaps hidden behind familar jargon («in information - theoretic terms, evolution of the eye is impossible»), or cleverly disguised as well - established results from other sciences («quantum electrodynamics suggests that consciousness is the fundamental nature of reality, and so we don't need to age, and crime will be reduced if we meditate on it correctly»).
The dates concerning those emails has no bearing on their veracity and it is SO disingenuous to even suggest such a thing as so many leftist blogs are doing.
As Fry says, it may sound pretentious at first to suggest such a thing.
Here in Georgia, it'd be far more likely for state climatological personnel to be subject to political pressure running the other way... not that I've specifically heard anything suggesting such a thing has occurred.
Interestingly, some regular commenters here seem greatly concerned to prevent that message from getting out, to the point of calling anyone who dares to suggest such a thing a paid shill and part of a deliberate «Merchants Of Doubt» disinformation campaign — while they continue to repeat (with no supporting evidence whatsoever, and often contrary to observed facts) that rapid, major emissions reductions MUST impose draconian «deprivation and hardship» on the entire population.
We have never suggested such a thing.
At the meeting in front of hundreds of colleagues I was made to feel like fool for suggesting such a thing and bluntly told it could not be done because it had always been done the way it was currently being done.
I thought it would be fun to do a Christmas at the Beach or Surfer's Christmas this year but everybody thought I had lost all my marbles to even suggest such a thing!

Not exact matches

Writer James Clear suggests starting small, choosing one thing to improve incrementally every day, and committing to not pushing off things that take less than two minutes to do, such as washing the dishes after a meal or eating a piece of fruit to work toward the goal of eating healthier.
Suggested new targets include such things as mandated biodiversity, worldwide employment equity, more female politicians, lower obesity and greater Internet access.
At the center of the initiative is a website where «citizen scientists» can suggest problems that could potentially be addressed through emerging technologies, such as data analytics, satellite technologies, or the Internet of things, McCauley says.
He suggested that internal problems, such as Brexit and the conflict between member states on how to handle the refugee problem, had created tensions within the EU that were being redirected at China, and that things were only likely to get worse.
And being perhaps the world's most comprehensive aggregator of economic data for the largest and most advanced economies on the planet — and having tracked such data for the last five decades — one might suggest that the OECD knows a thing or two about improving productivity and making an economy grow.
However, recent research suggests multitasking in the workplace isn't such a great thing.
I also suggested that if you are part of a team blog such as Savvy one of the things we did in the early days was to comment on each others posts.
That suggests that underlying inflation pressures from such things as wage increases remain muted.
But, I'd suggest there is no such thing as a «wrong price» in any market.
Like (Episcopalian) Joseph Fletcher, who taught Situation Ethics in the 1960s, the exhortation suggests that there are exceptions to every moral rule and that there is no such thing as an intrinsically evil act.
I therefore offer that such a «fast» (as you suggest) from all things spiritual may be unnecessary for all people... though I think that some may benefit from it.
the thing is, such as TGM suggests... he found his answer.
I was going to suggest that freedom might be a more appropriate word, but ultimately, there is no such thing as complete freedom, either.
Not surprisingly, I received quite a number of comments on this post who were outraged that I would suggest that Jesus talked about such things.
On the other hand, if he / she does exist, which I'm convinced he / she does (consider the exquisite mathematical formulas that help to explain the order of the universe — suggesting a higher level of intelligence in its design, or look into a new born's face), the last thing I want to do is go around telling everyone my brain is a computer and there is no such thing as Santa Klaus.
i believe it was meant for the few chosen and selected by God... there is such a thing as «lone ranger Christians» and not by choice as some like Charles Stanley suggest... it's a lonely existence especially for the single and sick who have no one to turn too.
Second, I feel that he was in a sense labeling / judging his students by suggesting that they would do such a thing.
Rather than speaking for the Joint Declaration, let me just suggest why Luther would want to say such a thing.
A subtitle like «The Violent Legacy of Monotheism» suggests what Regina Schwartz does in fact at least partially deliver with The Curse of Cain: yet another piece of highly marketable radical academic ressentiment, to be welcomed by those who applaud such things and decried by those who revile them.
Therefore, the authors strongly suggest that such things should be done away with, and we should all become house churches.
Are you suggesting that there is no such thing as an American Muslim?
I now turn to a reconception of human destiny, such as may be suggested in the process conceptuality but which will be as loyal as possible to the general view of things that biblical material provides.
One of his most frequently quoted remarks, «Only two things will I seek to know, God and the soul, the soul and God (from the Soliloquies), is frequently cited to show the absurdity of such religious priorities, and to suggest that this emphasis on the irrelevant or the unreal prompted civilization's descent into the darkest ages.
Maybe people who say such a thing should be arrested, as Bill O'Reilly, Fox news host, suggested on his show.
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