The more you date, the more you will see
all sorts of things people lie about, or at least that you suspect they lie about.
These are
the sorts of things people say after a weekend of playing.
It seems somewhat of an oversight to have the digital cockpit instrument display only available at such a high level, when it seems like
the sort of thing people would easily pay for if the SEL trim were just a bit more expensive.
Of course, this wasn't a random sample (you can tell from the very first number: 98.6 percent were comics readers), and the preferred genres may reflect
the sorts of things people come to Fleen to read about in the first place.
While there are of course legitimate academic reasons to study the text and regular folks may just be plain curious about the book, reading Mein Kampf isn't exactly
the sort of thing people will want to do on the commute to work - which could be exactly why it's proving so popular in ebook format.
Clearing closets and drawers of unwanted items is just
the sort of thing people tend to postpone.
One thing I noticed is that the controls felt a bit «looser» this time around, making it slightly more difficult to be as precise in the strikes and the turns as I'd like to be — though this is
the sort of thing a person can accommodate with a bit of experience and concentration.
The very
sort of thing a person would insure against and they deny it.
And then I started thinking women wetting themselves wasn't really
the sort of thing people wanted to read on a Monday morning... so I scrambled for something else and... nuh, nuthin».
Not exact matches
Entrepreneurs are not paperwork -
sorts of people but some
things just have to be written down and signed.
When Lyft first launched, recalls the company's director
of marketing strategy & operations Gina Ma, «it felt like really asking
people to participate in this really big
sort of social experiment almost — the idea
of doing these
things that your mom always told you not to do.»
«You reflect on your emotional feelings and then you generate some
sort of recognition judgment,» researcher Paula Niedenthal says, «and the most important
thing that results is that you take the appropriate action — you approach the
person or you avoid the
person.»
«Its theory seems to be: Let's get lots
of people to push for all
sorts of things and the world will get better, it's kind
of a shot gun approach rather than a targeted one.
We've figured out some drugs that usually work, but as we learn more about the human body and our genetic code — the
things we have in common but also the
things that make us unique — we may come up with a new
sort of medicine, tailored for each
person.
While most
people would never dream
of doing the
sorts of things that got Louis C.K. or Harvey Weinstein into trouble, we do all still have the same tendency to grow less empathetic as we become more powerful.
Television shows depict
people moaning on the bed and demanding all
sorts of things from oppressed spouses or parents.
«
People wan na hire people that they know and are comfortable with, so the more relationships you have, the easier it'll be for you to get a job, have someone recommend you, that sort of thing.&
People wan na hire
people that they know and are comfortable with, so the more relationships you have, the easier it'll be for you to get a job, have someone recommend you, that sort of thing.&
people that they know and are comfortable with, so the more relationships you have, the easier it'll be for you to get a job, have someone recommend you, that
sort of thing.»
Pew wants more regulations to protect the
people who use these cards — the
sorts of things now required for checking accounts: clear disclosure
of terms and fees, an easy way to track transactions, FDIC insurance and protection from unauthorized transactions.
It's
sort of interesting how much time everyone spends reading and writing about the habits
of really successful
people when I can tell you the one
thing that sets them apart in one little phrase: They're not slackers.
Joseph Uscinski: There are all
sorts of things that
people see that they think are clues put out there.
One
of the most important
things a municipality can do is to recruit more businesses and shoppers to the downtown area, and using social media and even SEO (Search Engine Optimization) techniques to ensure that
people can see what
sort of exciting
things South Orange is up to is critical.
«It's quite normal for Americans and Western
people to behave like this — they live in free sex societies where nobody cares about this
sort of thing, so what do you expect?»
Within moments
of meeting
people, you decide all
sorts of things about them, from status to intelligence to promiscuity.
Surely I'm not the first
person to have thought
of this — it would actually only surprise me if this
sort of thing wasn't widespread in Hollywood.
People have made enemies, harmed their reputations, and even gotten fired over the same
sort of thing.
You probably wouldn't guess it, but the
people behind some
of your favorite movies and TV shows — even some
of the ones that seem the least tied to reality — might have consulted a scientist in an attempt to keep
things (
sort of) realistic.
Such a dead simple memory booster should be the
sort of thing schools routinely share with kids, but according to MacLeod
people more often find their way to using this technique by instinct than instruction.
To say that someone has a right to something is quite different from saying merely that «it would be good if we did this» or «good
people and good companies do this
sort of thing.»
«We're giving [the shot] in the fall — that's when
people start to get colds and acute bronchitis and
things of that
sort.
I would imagine in urban areas like Toronto, Vancouver or Montreal, which have significant populations
of recent immigrants, there's probably a significant subset
of people who fled from countries where governments do all
sorts of nasty
things with the information they collect about their citizens and who aren't all that keen to provide such information here (you might say, «sure, but Canada's not Iran», to which the answer would be «exactly»).
These are all the kinds
of things that HR managers and talent developers obsess over, and also the
sorts of questions
people ask themselves when they're deciding between job offers: Should I work at Company A, where I'd have better benefits but a worse commute, or Company B, which does important work but doesn't pay very well?
But all
sorts of other
things can have an impact on whether
people complain, seemingly unrelated or only peripherally - related issues or events like Cambridge Analytica, concerns about privacy and so on.»
I must be a different
sort of American, because I'm far from wealthy and quite like to see other
people enjoy nice
things.
The president, in the tweets, portrayed his nondisclosure agreement with the actress as the
sort of thing «very common among celebrities and
people of wealth.»
And I reckon, it's
sort of interesting for me for private equity in terms
of all we've seen, and what we have seen, where we have seen some misconduct and
things like that,»cause I always think like, to my simple mind, that the
people in private equity, they're the greatest, they're actually adding value to their clients, they're getting paid really really well, you know, if I was in that position, the one
thing I would think to myself as I skipped to work was like just «Let's not mess it up.
«But if governments continue to just print money like crazy, devaluing the currencies all around the world,
people are figuring it out real quick — with bitcoin that
sort of thing can't happen and
people are going to just flood to want to use bitcoin instead
of dollars or euros or yen.»
Been working for my company for 10 years now, and
people say all
sorts of bad
things about corporate America.
«We are in a valley
of people who challenge the status quo, so it
sort of seems natural that we have venture investors who are thinking about how to do
things differently,» said Aileen Lee, founder
of Cowboy Ventures and a former partner at Kleiner Perkins.
I'm still waiting for someone to tell me why these
people can't use any other facility... including any one
of the thousands
of churches in the area, many
of whom have large spaces all ready to go for exactly that
sort of thing.
Delusions get
people crazy and then they might kill or not depending on what
sort of things they are thinking about.
We need
people out there to debunk stereotypes, because these
sorts of things don't get fixed on their own.
People do goofy
things on all
sorts of things so I don't really understand what your point is.
Matthew 5:11 «God blesses you when
people mock you and persecute you and lie about you and say all
sorts of evil
things against you because you are my followers.
11 «Happy are YOU when
people reproach YOU and persecute YOU and lyingly say every
sort of wicked
thing against YOU for my sake.
The third category deals with
things that would not convince him at all: speaking in tongues or other pseudo-miracles;
people's conversion stories; any subjective experience; the Bible Code or other numerological feats, creationism
of any
sort.
Its funny how supposedly intelligent
people can still believe in this
sort of thing... May all being have piece and happiness...
Not only are those sensible ways
of living but they're also
things that create community, interdependence, the
sort of life that we're made for together — and break the patterns
of unsustainability and also land us in a place where we're the wealthiest country in the world and also one
of the most lonely, medicated and depressed
people in the world.
Now we see all
sorts of disgusting
things come out dealing with kiidie perverts.And they still do disturbing
things.They want to beatify a priest from Yugoslavia who had blessed the Utashe movement a movement in WW2 that was responsible for killing 100,000's
of people in very heinous ways.
I thought it vital at this stage to find intelligent
people who were both Christian and literate: Christians who'd read Proust, that
sort of thing.
I am looking for authenticity, relevancy, no ovewhelming bands that take away from the experience
of worship, clergy who are willing to answer my hard questions, who understand doubt is a stepping stone to deepening my belief, who accept everyone as Jesus did (and we know Jesus was a rebel who accepted and led all
sorts of people), who don't feel the need to try to be hip, who speak about
things without inserting politics, who are wiling to trash the temple to bring us back to the truth, who will step out
of the box
of comfort and be real.