Sentences with phrase «something about all names»

C'mmon something about his name stirs something deep inside you, otherwise why would you comment.
I enjoyed considering names but at some point in the conversation I'd always say something about all names on the table until we know.
So good was the assembly of machines at our 2018 All - Stars competition that our editors at one point stood atop Mount Charleston, soaked in the introspection - inspiring views, and mumbled something about naming every car present an official All - Star, and it wasn't the thin mountain air talking.
So good is this assembly of machines that our editors at one point stood atop Mount Charleston, soaked in the introspection - inspiring views, and mumbled something about naming every car present an official All - Star, and it wasn't the thin mountain air talking.
He knew nothing about the car — but he did know something about the name.
It should say something about your name, genre, and book title.
You need to do something about the name of the apartments because the taxi service doesn't know it by the name Amphora Apartments.
There's something about that name that might give you a clue: this is the place to go to snorkel with Mantas.
And they've got to do something about the name (some are calling them Boris bikes, after the mayor, Boris Johnson).
But we have to do something about that name, guys.
Perhaps it's something about the name «Jack.»

Not exact matches

Whitman is something of a surprise choice for the job because her name has been bandied about in recent years for high - profile positions in both the technology sector and politics.
If it's not a play on the person's name, it recognizes something about their personality or something they've done.
A relevant name can convey a brand's engaging personality, express something interesting about the product or service, or it can be geared toward the intended audience and relate to cultural contexts.
Picture this scenario: You walk up to the store and before you walk in, the clerk not only greets you by name, but asks about something the two of you talked about weeks ago.
I knew right away there was something vaguely Morse Code - ish about the name.
«To all of you that have something nasty to say about me or other women who are built like me, women whose names you know, women whose names you don't, women who've been picked on, women whose husbands put them down, women at work or girls in school, I have one thing to say to you: kiss my fat ass,» she said.
Whether you've got student loans or a trust fund you never told your partner about, it's time to come completely clean and make sure your partner knows exactly what's in your name in case something happens to you.
«We walk into a store and people know our name, ask us personal questions, and tell us how great we look in a particular pair of shoes...» This got them to consider how we can transfer this experience to the digital landscape, something we know they've been thinking about.
On the wider civic election front, I have a name for you who knows something about Grande Prairie: Dr Daryl White.
After you contacted about every webmaster that mentioned either your URL or your company name without providing a link to your site, don't forget to add both queries as a Google Alert or something similar.
Both want to take something that has established laws governing the line between legal and criminal actions and throw away any reason in the name of «how some feel about it».
It means learning the person's name and something to ask them about the next time they appear.
I respect and admire almost all of the Mormons I've met, I just can't wrap my mind around the founding myths — something about magic stones named Throbbing and Vermin... but then again that isn't half as crazy as some of the Old Testament stuff.
Re: my name, I use it to give those with no substance something to write about — welcome to that club of losers.
I don't know how many times I have heard Christians say something like this about their political aspirations, «If my candidate (insert name) isn't elected, the United States will fall apart, and I'm not sure I even want to be here when that happens.»
• «Your life is going to be about something» or it's going to be about nothing,» declares a fellow named Bob Avakian, in a tract of sorts we picked up the other day.
I can point to one person who does something in the name of God, but that doesn't indicate anything bad about religion — it indicates something bad about that person.
Everytime religious people post something about God or something out of their belief, there comes the Atheists storming it with their typical (hateful, profane, disrespectful but in - fairness articulate, itellect, scientific and logical) replies and name callings such as; «2000 years religious numbnuts», «oxymorons who keep asking of sky daddy's help», «idiots who was fooled by a magical being in the sky» and so on and so forth.
Whatever it is, the thought of naming, (self - congratulating) myself something so ludicrous would speak volumes to me about my insecurity, as well as my arrogance.
By that I don't mean you have to take on any of the perceived baggage of the name, just that you are starting from a point of neutrality on the god - issue like we hopefully start from neutrality any time we don't know something and want to learn about it.
Ever since her story was featured in Christianity Today nearly a year ago, Butterfield has become something of a celebrity within the conservative evangelical world, and every time I'm in conversation with someone about the potential dangers of «conversion therapy» (which seeks to change a person's sexual orientation through counseling and prayer), her name invariably comes up.
Something about the young Lakita character reminded me so much of a little girl I met named Bharathi, who is pictured above on the left.
There is something in the bible about who gets to avenge and, to the best of my recollection, none of your names was listed.
Someone names «enderspeakerforthedead» said something about not being able to speak to what's in the Quran if you haven't read it and understood it.
Americans are cute when they address the name «Christian» as something foreign when their homeland is all about Christianity from the start to the end.
The classical space and biblically resonant name suit JW just fine, and they also say something about the Emergent movement.
If a man becomes a philanthropist with the deliberate intention of expecting to see his name in the New Year honors, we rightly feel that there is something hollow about his ostensible concern for others.
It has for most people no other meaning than to name this particular person2, though there may be an awareness that this part of his name means that there is something special about him.
I am often speaking to an individual about someone they strongly dislike (even hate), and rather than refer to that other person in any way, either by their actual name or even some derogatory name (that fool, that idiot, that moron), the person I am talking to will simply say something like, «I can't stand to be around that... any longer!»
Wow, that concerns me about as much as if something like Harry or Jack were the most popular baby name in a place like Iran.
When your playing a silly game with a bat and ball you bring him out, you thank him when you move a pig skin across a line, you stamp his name on my currency, you tell my children about him in our public schools, you trot him out like a prized pig at a fair anytime something good or bad or even mediocre happens, and even when you stub your toe.
My humble suggestions to you is to go to The Quran and what it talks about Jesus... as his (Jesus) name is mentioned there 80 + times... there are chapters with his mothers name, with his grand fathers (father of Marry) name and so on... i am not asking you to be a Muslim but see what it says and think what make sense... you may be amazed who knows and will discover something new...
It might be a better parallel if I retold a story from the Gospels and changed some names or details to make a point about something going on in today's world.
We learn something about the nature of God when we take seriously the cultures that take shape in God's name.
But as a bit of irony, here is something about our family name name.
Names did not merely mark off A from B; they really said something about the nature of those who bore them.
If we never talk about something, where we refuse to even call it by name, how do we examine if we have it?
The good stuff in question mostly concerns a mysterious aristocrat named Alexandra (Sigourney Weaver), who is consorting with a lot of the leftover villains from the other shows and is clearly up to something, though the show is mighty cagey about what.
That pattern or movement in the stories about Jesus, that structure, functions something like a «depth grammar» in all enactments of the practice of the public worship of God in Jesus» name, by virtue of which all its culturally and theologically diverse instances bear family resemblances to one another.
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