Sentences with phrase «something about the subject by»

Not exact matches

That God's love, manifest in diverse ways throughout the duration of the universe, might come to a full and unsurpassable self - expression in an individual human being who lived and died in the Middle East almost two thousand years ago does not seem incongruous with what we now understand about the nature of an evolving universe, especially if we regard religion as a phenomenon emergent from the universe rather than just something done on the earth by cosmically homeless human subjects.
In times gone by (or maybe still) the King / Queen used to have a time for his / her subjects to have space to bring things to his / her attention or speak up about something.
Distraction — If all else fails; you can completely distract your kids by both completely changing the subject and making it about you or something that you did or saw that day.
De Blasio introduced the subject of mayoral control by finishing remarks on his son Dante's impending graduation and saying, «let's talk about something a little less sweet; let's talk about the situation in Albany right now.»
Something similar can happen in Telluride, where attendees celebrate their shared good taste and finally get to have the kind of conversations about movies — and other subjects, which this year included Natalie Portman - produced meat - is - murder doc «Eating Animals» and global - warming call - to - action «An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power,» introduced by Al Gore himself — they can't have back home.
And that he does so with a portmanteau film about men and their horses — set in the beautiful Icelandic landscape popularised by Walter Mitty — proves that cinema can utilise just about any subject matter to say something important if it tries.
The dreaded second album syndrome is something that haunts artists working in any medium, so it's curious that Dayton and Faris decided to approach the subject head - on by making a film about that very thing.
We have written about how something called subject area bias also exists, unheard of in the VAM - related literature until a Tennessee administrator sent us a lead, and we analyzed Tennessee's data (see here and here, and also an article also written by my graduate student and now Dr. Jessica Holloway - Libell forthcoming in the esteemed Teachers College Record).
When Larry Gagosian first approached Mr. Elderfield in 2012 about organizing exhibitions for his gallery, Mr. Elderfield proposed a show about artists using their own studios as a subject of their art — something he had wanted to do at MoMA — and was given carte blanche by Mr. Gagosian.
There is something uncannily aggressive about the works by Implied Violence and SuttonBeresCuller that, like a number of other projects on view, point to Seattle as the subject of an escalating frustration.
A paper reporting a «rigorous double blind» study — the VIGOR trial — was submitted to NEJM in 1998, got through peer review at one of the most up - tight journals in the world of medicine, and — by way of cherry - picking the data submitted (selecting out some study subjects whose adverse events histories which, if considered, would've significantly affected the safety profile for rofecoxib and revealed something that Merck really didn't want us prescribers to learn about their «blockbuster» product — was published to be touted by Merck's marketing weevils as solid proofs of Vioxx's tolerability, efficacy, and safety.
Because I know something about the subject — and because of the recent records set by Category 5 Hurricanes Dean and Felix — I decided to have a look at how Lomborg applies this argument to the issue of hurricanes and global warming in particular (p. 72 - 81 of his new book).
The first is that many of the oldest and largest trees are in fact made hollow by fire, and that the fire cavities can be the size of a small room in which one can sleep [or live] quite comfortably [I have] which has something to say about the nature of the fires that these trees are subject to, if it can burn through two feet of bark.
«Blogs written by lawyers, judges, law professors and law students that provide solid information and critical analysis on subjects the authors know something about are just as authoritative as other secondary sources.»
«And certainly when we see something that suggests that 20 per cent of articling students are being subjected to unwelcome and harassing conduct by their principles, we have to do something about it.»
FLATOW: So you could be sitting there in the back of the room while somebody's going through the ABCs, and the teacher calls you, and you're so distracted by the bullying that happened, the teacher just thinks you're just not interested in the subject when you're really just upset about something.
I can't see time - in as a feasible replacement because we are disciplining him for doing one or more of these things: a) persistently interfering with something that really needs to get done now b) repeatedly interrupting adult conversation by talking loudly about an unrelated subject and then shrieking, «YOU»RE INTERRUPTING!!!»
Something about it is still a bit counterintuitive to me though... Maybe if posts were categorized by subject on the Marketplace page?
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