Sentences with phrase «tell if that point»

A full review is coming, but time will tell if that point of view will be validated or not.

Not exact matches

If you're going to go to all the effort to do demos, Lisa says you should make a point of telling people to spread the word.
Attribution models have evolved from so - called «last touch attribution» to the point where you can tell if a particular ad campaign or content marketing approach is resonating.
If you're working towards a certain budget, and are happy to tell me broadly what it is, I can try and point you to the most relevant options.
So next time you're facing a big decision and have formed an opinion, tell your folksm «Hey team, I'm willing to be argued out of this if anyone has another point of view.»
But you have the right to point fingers if people are not honest about their fears and try to explain it away,» he told the Politiken newspaper.
But there's another category of roadside business that caters to the travelers of America's highways: the curiosity, the tourist trap, the legendary destination, that place your friends have told you you've just got to see if you happen to be going from point A to point B.
Brown told us that if Inspire were to go public at some point, the expectations for patience and trust in long - term planning would already have been established.
On Tuesday, Bridgewater Associates — the world's largest hedge fund — told its clients that if Donald Trump won, the Dow Jones industrial average would plunge 10 %, or just over 1,900 points.
«There was a point, he told me, where after spending nearly $ 200,000, he felt like, «I am completely illiterate in something that I have so many ideas in, in an area that is the future, and in an area where if I want to continue building things then I need to be able to speak the language,»» Poonawala said.
The company's visionary founder and CEO Josh Boger tells his staff at one point, «If you give me 20 years and a half - trillion dollars, I guarantee I can put people on Mars and bring them back.
Peter Karpinski In college, before I was CEO of Sage Restaurant Group, my lacrosse coach and mentor at West Point, Major David Nadeau, told me, «You don't have to worry about the next day if you truly believe in yourself, and can instill those feelings into others.»
If you never tell people you need a break, don't be surprised when they push you to the snapping point.
That gets right to the point of what you discovered in your reporting, without pretending to be above the fray and reporting what powerful, self - interested «sources» tell you as if it is the gospel?
They do not in fact bury their heads in the sand as the old wives» tale tells it, but the fact that most of us believe that myth to be true only makes a stronger point: if the move you choose is to burrow in deeper to protect the current nest on which you rest, the odds are high that you're leaving yourself a sitting duck (or ostrich, as it were).
I met Evan, he sold me the vision for Snap, if you like, and don't forget this is at a point when they just turned down pretty significant offers from Google and Facebook and all of my colleagues and friends and family were telling me I was an idiot to join the small startup in Venice.
On the other hand, there are those pages that post several times in a day to the point that people can't tell if it's a new post or they are experiencing deja vu.
The chief exec then drove his point home, telling Strober, «If you feel, respectfully, that you can get a higher return than the 38 % you got last year... you can sell your shares in Starbucks.»
But the point is that your hair - triggers can tell you a lot about yourself, if you're willing to pursue the clues they provide.
If you need a solid starting point, create an art fundraiser and tell your story.
As Katz pointed out, «I honestly think that if Democrats broadly were told a year ago that this would be the extent of what Trump had referred to as «doing a number» on Dodd - Frank, they would probably take this deal.»
As Lee told the audience, «If someone asks you questions [during a pitch meeting], take notes, and send a follow - up the next day saying, «These are the things that we discussed; I wanted to follow up on these points
«At this point it's really uncertain if there's any detectable human influence on any hurricane or tropical cyclone metric,» Tom Knutson, an NOAA meteorologist who studies hurricanes, told Vox in October.
As a former Third Point employee told journalist Nicholas Stein in 2007, Loeb «believes that if you embarrass a CEO in front of his friends at the club, make him feel like people are talking about him, you can exert change on his company.»
Up until 60 days ago, if you just randomly told me in the last nine years that the DOW was down 300 points, I would've said (16:40 — 16:42 inaudible).
«If I were concerned about anything from a long - term housing market point of view it's the supply of housing in Toronto and Vancouver,» Evan Siddal, the head of the federal housing agency, the Canada Mortgage & Housing Corporation, told Reuters.
You seem to believe that you are aware of what everyone is thinking, as this is the second time you have made a sweeping blanket statement... but to answer your question: I can assure you if that woman did see an angel telling her to kill her children, it certainly would have been a fallen angel, or demon if you prefer and not from God... If you had even a basic understanding of angels and fallen angels and the protection of God, this would be a moot point... but it appears that you want to play the game of how ridiculous can I be.if that woman did see an angel telling her to kill her children, it certainly would have been a fallen angel, or demon if you prefer and not from God... If you had even a basic understanding of angels and fallen angels and the protection of God, this would be a moot point... but it appears that you want to play the game of how ridiculous can I be.if you prefer and not from God... If you had even a basic understanding of angels and fallen angels and the protection of God, this would be a moot point... but it appears that you want to play the game of how ridiculous can I be.If you had even a basic understanding of angels and fallen angels and the protection of God, this would be a moot point... but it appears that you want to play the game of how ridiculous can I be...
While this may be true to some point, follow me on this cycle: If we don't sell albums we won't be given money to make another one; if we don't sell records we cant go out on tour (again, which is where we make our money to live); if we don't sell records we don't get marketing money which tells you when our album is coming out and when / where our next show is in your areIf we don't sell albums we won't be given money to make another one; if we don't sell records we cant go out on tour (again, which is where we make our money to live); if we don't sell records we don't get marketing money which tells you when our album is coming out and when / where our next show is in your areif we don't sell records we cant go out on tour (again, which is where we make our money to live); if we don't sell records we don't get marketing money which tells you when our album is coming out and when / where our next show is in your areif we don't sell records we don't get marketing money which tells you when our album is coming out and when / where our next show is in your area.
Point is if someone believes something and it does not hurt others but makes them a better person should you tell them they are wrong?
Having been a Baptist for nearly twenty years and a Latter - day Saint for 35 years now, I can tell you his religion, if it is lived fully, will only make him a much better person, and not one you would have any problem trusting from a character and moral point of view.
My point was, if Jesus was humble and back then told his disciples to sell all they had and follow him, then he must not have been to bog on adorning ones self with the riches and material things of the Earth.
If reason tells us that «John 1800» engraved into a rock must have an intelligent mind as its source, should not also the infinitely more complex and meaningful information found in our DNA point toward a Supreme Designer that gave us life as well as creating all the universe?
I told him that he had begun to slide down a slippery slope, for the five points of Calvinism are like five links on a chain: they stand or fall together and if one link in the chain breaks, it is only a matter of time before the whole system unravels.
The point is if someone believes in a god, any god, and they truly believe that god told them to sacrifice a child, are they morally justified to do it?
Course OldAdam's original post seems to be merely supporting David's cartoon, pointing out how prone we all are to putting a spin on what we say; I know I can have that problem, have even told my wife to call me out if she hears me starting to put a spin on something.
The point is that we've all told a lie, even if it was only once.
In fact, if at any point I ever default to language that implies Tony is my superior, he has halted the conversation and told me that he never wants me to talk that way; that I am an equal and co-creator in anything we do.
If Jesus embodies God's dreams for the world, then citizens of the Kingdom start by imitating him — by eating with the people he ate with, by telling the sort of stories he told, by healing and forgiving, by serving and praying, by resisting the temptations of power and money and violence, by breaking down religious barriers, by loving enemies, by showing humility and grace, by overturning some tables and dining at others, by being obedient to the point of death.
With regard to miracles, CS Lewis pointed out that if, on each of two nights, I put # 10 into my bedside drawer the laws of arithmetic tell me that I now have a total of # 20.
I agree with not going trying to change the world as in change to people by telling them they are wrong and I am right (IF I have understood your point of view) but I guess I'm not so convinced when it comes to society, and just accepting what ever **** is in there or anywhere.
But if these similes are dominical, they tell us something quite startling about Jesus» understanding of his ministry: they tell us that Jesus regarded his ministry as marking a new point of departure quite incompatible with the existing categories of Judaism.
Firstly, it must be remembered, that he disclaims very early in the book that he can only speak for the mainline denominations with which he is familiar, and although my memory may fail me, he implies that he can only speak for his observations of the churches / leaders with whom he is familiar, and also that he may be wrong, and also, that he is only pointing out what he calls a possible cause for the problems he has seen, and hopes that his suggestions / ideas, will be considered, researched, etc, and that time will tell if his thesis bears any truth or not.
I'm sorry, Daniel; if you can't understand what Jesus said, there's no point in my telling you anything.
But if the general subject matter of the novels is demonstrably congruent with Mantel's past, why does she tell the stories from Cromwell's point of view?
if that was a lie.he would not have died for it knowing it was a lie... so the point... Paul told truth..
If some one told you about something that happened say next door to you, in there point of view.
The telling point that Galileo presented ironically was that if you really wanted to start from a small number of entities, you could always consider the letters of the alphabet as the fundamental entities, since you could construct the whole of human knowledge out of them.
But if he had the charge of a hospital, or lived in a city where the pestilence was raging, if he would be studying fermentation, the circulation of the blood, blisters, and the like, and such like excellent points, when he should be visiting his patients, and saving men's lives; if he should even turn them away, and let them perish, and tell them that he has not time to give them advice, because he must follow his own studies, I would consider that man as a most preposterous student, who preferred the remote means before the end itself of his studies: indeed, I would think him but a civil kind of murderer.
If we point out that over decades the vast increase in total production has not improved the lot of half the world's people, we will be told to be patient.
Dr Ashenden told the Telegraph: «We are saying if you don't draw a halt at this point the same thing will happen here and there will be a significant number who will secede and reconstitute an Anglican church to keep faith with authentic Anglican Christianity.»
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