Sentences with phrase «sometimes equates»

Interest only sometimes equates with a willingness to be involved.
Local colour sometimes equates to «tourist shows», but in Laos it is the Tagbat: 2,000 monks walking around Luang Prabang at 6 am in a ceremony embraced by local people.
I tend to go with quality with my shoes, but sometimes that equates to quantity too!
Amazing how simpler sometimes equates to better as in this case.
Your sanity sometimes equates to screens for your littles, and that's okay.
Add in some steady business expansion and dividend increases, and patient investors get rewards that sometimes equate to triple - digit percentage gains.
Christians have sometimes equated stewardship with the prudent management of natural resources for human consumption.
The modern look is sometimes equated with discomfort, but that should never be the case!
Western culture, sometimes equated with Western civilization, Western lifestyle or European civilization, is a term used very broadly to refer to a heritage of social norms, ethical values, traditional customs, belief systems, political systems, and specific artifacts and technologies that have some origin or association with Europe.
Sometimes we equate that with an «A» on a test.
[Laughs] Sometimes I equate painting to physics or mathematics... there are many possibilities but in the end there is only one way to find a particular painting.
«Easy» it what a lot of products promise, but sometimes they equate the term with taking a minimalist approach.
Thai Hung Nguyen, a real estate practitioner in the Washington, D.C., metro area, said his Vietnamese clients sometimes equate signing documents with being in legal trouble.

Not exact matches

One of the interesting points she raises on this episode is why a sale equates to a change for the customer, and why that change is sometimes the thing that stops a sale from happening.
Sometimes a low interest rate might not equate to the lowest interest cost.
Meanwhile, if we lose the ability to respect that people can only go as far as their consciences will allow, we risk becoming mired in a muck of illusion, imagining hate where none exists, equating compelled behavior with authentic love, and losing sight of the fact that traveling together sometimes means that we walk the extra mile on one challenging road, and they walk it on the next.
These two issues sometimes draw different kinds of converts, but they are often equated with one root problem: individualism.
So we have learned that the law, sometimes mistakenly equated with justice, can not be considered sacrosanct.
Sometimes Judeo Christianity is equated with Aramaic or Syriac speaking Christianity.
I think that's part of why you don't need studs across the line, and why sometimes having studs across the line doesn't always equate to an awesome year.
Failing to succeed because of a challenging birth scenario, maternal pain, cracked nipples, ineffective suckling, poor latch or return to work would not equate an inability to achieve optimal breastfeeding, although certainly it does seem that way sometimes (Abrour & Kessler, 2013).
IN fact, I was readin in a book about breastfeeding not necessarily equating to a Mamma always being attached — sometimes, from this study, the bottle feeding MUm is just as much or more, depending on how she feels about it and how she reacts to the child during the feeding, the feeling she eminates and how she is generally at other times.
Sometimes high - quality can equate to a higher price tag, so we've listed a budget - friendly alternative below when possible.
Sometimes being deep doesn't always equate to being great, as is evidenced with the very intelligent by writer - director John Sayles.
They may equate achievement and grades with self - esteem and self - worth, which sometimes leads to fear of failure and interferes with achievement.
At Barnes and Noble it seems to matter a small bit, but Amazon almost seems to decrease compared to when it's at 2.99... sometimes I think the higher price gets it more visibility, not that folks are willing to pay more or look for a higher price, but equating price with quality.»
Sometimes, as with promoting oneself, the writer needs to use techniques that they may not necessarily equate with the art of writing.
Similarly, sometimes borrowers equate lowering their interest rates with lowering their monthly payments, but these do not necessarily go hand - in - hand.
Sometimes a high price equates with high quality but in this instance the one - year warranty is worrisome.
Stocks, bonds, mutual funds, real - estate properties, gold, precious metals etc., can lose value, sometimes even all their value.However, most of us equate RISK with «losses» directly.
With so much precipitation it's sometimes easy to forget that snow and ice do not equate to water sources.
Sometimes in painting, scale is equated to importance.
Unlike a large proportion of personal injury cases, a claim with relatively low value does not equate necessarily with low costs as «smaller» cases are often just as complex and sometimes more so than high value cases.
But durability doesn't exactly equate to repairability and, in fact, is sometimes the opposite.
This failure to recognise extreme child welfare interventions as markers of social inequalities (and which may sometimes compound social inequalities) is not helped when the Secretary of State, Michael Gove, equates social workers «understanding of the impact of social inequalities with robbing «families of a proper sense of responsibility,....
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