Sentences with phrase «something like reading»

I love reading your posts and poking around on your blog — there's always something I like reading about while taking a break.
This could be something like reading up on a topic related to their dream, spending one - minute with them while they are engaging in a special hobby related to their dream, or just listening for things your partner talks about that are in any way related.
When it comes to something like reading your Kindle books it is slick and smooth.
Research shows that we will be attracted by physical, clothing, appearance, smile, a subconscious behavior and even when he or she is focusing on doing something like reading a magazine or listening to music.
I hope there comes a time that mobile versions of console games get versions looked more than the original I can understand that the mobile hardware has it limitations but this isn't something I like a read an interview and they said «that in 2017 the top range phones have processor power equal that of PS4 / XboxOne «how cool it will be that when new games comes out that besides it's playable on PC / XboxOne / PS4 it's also released on our iPhones

Not exact matches

If you stick to your schedule, treat yourself to something you enjoy like listening your favorite song or reading a chapter of a good book.
It sounds like something you might read on a cat poster, but another uniting feature of Musk, Tesla, Jobs, Marie Curie, Albert Einstein and other innovators is an intense faith in their own ability to overcome obstacles.
It was very poorly written and if you read it, what it was dealing with was gender stereotypes, why some men like to oppress women, why other women like to be submissive, you know, something like «Fifty Shades of Grey.»»
And this untold part of SPI's history, which the company probably should have discussed to dispel that idea that it's a Russian enterprise, reads like something from an Ian Fleming novel, filled with spies, alleged murders, and international intrigue.
And it's not as if Williams doesn't have the money (he made a reported $ 50 million selling Blogger to Google) or the connections (Twitter's angel investors read like a who's who of Silicon Valley) to attempt something more ambitious.
They would not type in something like, «CEO, Company X» or «Marketing Director», which is what far too many LinkedIn headlines read like right now.
And in the course of working with numerous consultants, business owners, startups and even Fortune 500s, I've come to realize something startling: Most of us know what good copy looks like, and what it reads like, but when we put something down, we don't know how to follow the rules.
Before long, your piece reads something like this: All these horrible things are happening in your businesses and, as a result, you're not making any money.
One example that I read about, Stanford University, a teacher in artificial intelligence offered a class, a couple of hundred kids in the class, he offered it online to 30,000 people, or 20,000 people, and if I remember correctly when he gave the test there were 400 people, or something like that, that did better than the number one kid at Stanford.
It seems like, at least once a month, we read about a famous company that sent a thoughtless tweet or posted something politically incorrect on Facebook and suffered a PR backlash as a result.
The first step to achieving something vastly important but fuzzily defined like work - life balance isn't soul - searching or reading up on the issue, it's nailing down what you mean by the term in the first place.
Does it ever bother you that your gravestone could read something like, «Here lies the man who created Jessica Simpson's behind»?
And if you have to make a decision late in the day, try to do something restful beforehand, like taking a nap, reading or going for a walk.
They see an item they like (on Instagram or Facebook), they research it, they find other brands selling something similar, they compare prices, they read reviews and then they finally make a decision.»
He was reading a professional photography magazine and thought about how there wasn't something like this for the people he was meeting on Instagram.
Hopefully more people will read up on something like bitcoin then take action to their best interest.
It was rather like reading something out of some Russian communist Pravda article, whereby the «dissident» was commanded to reply before the KGB came knocking at their doors.
As for CLB, it doesn't happen very often — maybe once every two years — but sometimes I (Whitney Tilson) see (at a conference) or read (on something like ValueInvestorsClub) an investment thesis that is so compelling and blindingly obvious that I immediately put the position on — which is what I did on Monday just after Einhorn's presentation.
Even if you have the friendliest angel in the world, or even if the world's savviest super-angel tells you she can't be bothered to read a term sheet, you'll independently have your own good reasons to put your company through something like the drill you'd encounter in a modestly - diligenced, priced round.
- Paul Tudor Jones Every time I read something like this, it makes me want to trade again.
I recent read «The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck» by Mark Manson, and I like that he frames happiness as a process — something that is with us as we solve problems — rather than a goal to be attained.
While people often link to, read and enjoy sources that link out manipulatively, very few of us will be likely to follow a Twitter account, friend someone on Facebook, or «like» something in a social site that's inauthentic, manipulative or spammy.
«sounds like you are just parroting something you either read in a book or heard someone else say when you mention that they were into mind - manipulation...»
When God says something before, and you see it happen after, it's not like reading it in the text where it's already happened and you are reading it after it's over.
Well rebutted, jazak allah khairan because I couldn't have collated such a response better (I know, I've been trying to put something like that together for two days now for someone else to read).
Reading something like this really gives this story the proper perspective.
Me personally would like to believe so and I do.If there is not god life is pretty pathetic if your think deeply about it.Theres always going to be someone who says no this is how something is or this happened exactly like this I know for sure (ha ok)... On another note instead of acting like you really do know everything maybe broaden your horizon and try church or read the bible and give God a chance.
no apparent evidence of ill - will, and 3)... an experience of unity.Now, David, I haven't known you for very long (blogwise), but I respect what I have read from yr deep and thoughtful spirit, so with that in mind, I just don't see how this personal experience is translatable or cd be used as some kind of template when faced with the real Wal - Mart world.Do we not, like Jesus, show out true colours under pressure.Maybe I'm missing something... please correct me If I am and remember, I'm not into boob jobs (cleavage enhancement)
I very carefully label my statements as something I believe, something I have read (I.e., with citations) and the like.
The same logic applies to something like Bible reading.
I wish there were a way to «subscribe to all» — all at once, or somehow to have a place where you can «read them all» via an rss feed or something like that.
If you read even briefly the concept of Hinduism or Sikhism, you will be astonished how close their descriptions are to what scientists are finding — something like a big bang is actually described in Vedas!
Borg is a liberal and I'd suggest to read a book which looks like a debate with the famous British theologian: N.T. Wright «who is Jesus» or something like that.
This almost totally mystified me; to read of churches like this at all; so little I had seen or heard or read of this (one or two exceptions were on my sphere of concern; few others something like this, I'd heard or read a bit of; are there really so many now?
Sweet goodness and mercy, she was trying to think of something that nobody liked reading and came up with Shakespeare!
Most people like to see their content accessed widely and so can learn some great tips (as well as read some good content) from these blogs, but «most popular» doesn't always mean «best» I'd say that for any blogger a key to judging your own success is to think about the purpose and intended audience of you blog — if you have a niche audience in a specific location you may not get a huge following but if you set out to acheive something worthwhile through your blog and you achieve it then that counts as success.
For example, a typical definition of «church» reads something like this:
That was a very interesting read many comments caught my attention I've recently been diagnosed with Bipolar I have hallucinations and hear voices in my ear's when I hallucinate it's likes they are trying to get me thousands of them I can only describe them as dark shadows and they are trying to get me just as they are about to get me a brilliant white light surrounds me and there's three entities humanly shaped but like this brilliant white light they are also glowing this brilliant whiteness I can't understand what they are saying the only way I can explain it is emotions comfort joy love is what I feel emanating from these entities the voices I hear aren't evil telling me to do bad things to people when I get put into a mode of fear I live in a rough area of Scotland and everytime I've got into a fight something possesses me I know this for a fact as I can't control myself I'm an observer watching my family / Friends say I change they say my eyes change and I look evil I personally do think possibly through my own personal experience I» am possessed as I act out of character I've lost interest in many things I've recently I decided it's time for change I've lost my faith I've been trying to connect with God and feel his love which I used to feel the presence of the holy spirit everytime I try connect I get a feeling of abandonment I just think if I am possessed could these entities stop me connecting with «God» I can say from my heart of hearts «JESUS CHRIST HAS COME IN THE FLESH» I think it's more to do with the persons own personal fears which I have noticed my fears have changed if I had to be truthfully with myself I fear God which I know I'm not supposed to just I can't explain it I guess if you ever need a test subject I'm up for the challenge like I said I'm on journey to find myself and my travels have brought me hear I'm going to hang around for a wee while there's lots of good information to be plundered loll
It is, indeed, something of an unusual event that an English bishop should base himself so firmly, not merely on the odd bland quotation here and there from whoever the current pope happens to be, in order to camouflage the true nature of some firmly secularist initiative, but on the spirit as well as the letter of entire magisterial documents, not least the Catechism of the Catholic Church itself — which, it will be remembered, we were all told by Bishop David Konstant was not for the likes of us, but for the bishops to read so they could tell us what was in it.
She reads His Word like something's burning hot in her chest.
I don't get how you read something like Acts or Romans or Galatians where it's the norm for this type of stuff and then you invent a million doctrines to give yourself an excuse for not having the faith to step out and do these things.
So it would read something like: when a guy rapes a girl, make him pay the rest of his life and don't make the girl marry him and don't treat her like damaged goods.
Wright's books have a way of making sense to me later, when I'm doing something other than reading them - like the laundry.
We must read the Old Testament through the lens of Jesus, and see that Jesus shows us what God is truly like, even though much of the Old Testament portrays something quite different.
No one aware of the present state of marriage can pick up and start to read a book like this without soon harboring the suspicion that something central to marriage has disappeared over the past several hundred years.
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