Sentences with phrase «think fits in with»

I think this fits in with that other question we've been tackling here — what is the relationship between these academic debates and what goes on in courts and lawyers» offices?
It's just a boring mode and I don't really think it fits in with the rest of the action packed game modes in Stardust.
Another point that I think fits in with this conversation.
LOVE your dress, I saw one on Boohoo and now I regret not buying it:» (Glad you had fun, I'm still pretty intimated by fashion events, I just don't think I fit in with that crowd!

Not exact matches

Whether it's partnering with a charity that fits your mission (think Warby Parker and Vision Spring), using speaking engagements to raise topics beyond the bottom line or including your mission in any collateral you have, it's important to be surround sound with your vision.
In about 90 days we went from wondering how we were going to pull together our next financing round to getting meetings with investors we thought would be a good fit for the company.
This attitude --» the most successful leaders here think of themselves third», he says — fit well with Mutual's culture, and he became CEO in 2005.
Through those points of contact we further winnow down who we think is a good fit for us and identify them to join us for internship programs in their sophomore or junior year with a hope that they then convert to join us full - time.
Asked if he thought Bird made mistakes with its launch, VanderZanden answered carefully: «Our approach is to work with cities very early on in the process, so we reached out, started a dialogue with Santa Monica the week we actually launched... Any time there's new innovation it's never clear exactly where you fit into the permitting and regulatory scheme.»
«Not only did I think Sloan was the perfect fit, but I could tell instantly in conversations with past and present students, and during my admissions interview, that Sloan got me, too.
How do you think this sort of thing is going to fit in with robot cars, which are now street legal in several U.S. states?
«I think they thought they would fit in well with the broader community we're building here at MaRS,» he shares.
Noting that Google's leadership greenlighted the autonomous idea «before a time when anybody thought this would be thing,» Krafcik — who now looks less like the auto executive he once was and more like the forever cool keyboard player in a 1970s progressive rock band, goateed and with styled gray hair and a trimly fitted blue suit — stressed that Google understood from the beginning the need to partner with car companies and early on sought to imagine how that collaboration might work.
[Figuring that out] was something that we think was important and quite valuable and in that way, it fits in with our core thesis.
«Ultimately based on a label that fits the right risk / benefit population and based on conversations with Amgen, we still think the drug could be a $ 500M + franchise,» Jefferies analyst Michael Yee wrote in a note to investors.
With two decades of business experience in the industry, Closets by Design's leadership team thought Jepson would be the perfect fit to open its new franchised location.
Also, include your full name in the email with a cover letter explaining us why do you think you would be a great fit for this team:)
If you think that this might not fit you, but you have a worthy idea, seek an entrepreneurial partner to work with in building a great business.
I think this fit in well with the season, and hey... it obviously sparked some link builders attention with the title.
I think this is useful information for blog users — How does the ordinary investor fit into the equation comprising of global factors coupled with manipulation in the stock markets?
Folman's adaptation attempts to update some of the themes of Lem's book to fit our modern obsession with entertainment, but the original novel is more about the use of psychotropic drugs to create a dream world in which everyone thinks himself happy.
Because it's topic is martyrdom, which fits in rather well with today's observances, don't you think?
And then to follow up the description by the author with the picture of Christians consciously thinking they must use this or that set of inside - group - think in order to fit in... that's just idiotic.
People in Avonlea thought she was weird, she didn't fit with how they were and this is why.
I could much more easily go with «Christian» as «follower of Christ» but... the term is so loaded, and everyone thinks you mean one of the other three versions of what «Christian» is, and besides, while there is a lot about Jesus that works for me, there is some that doesn't and I believe it is likely stuff inserted in after the fact to make things fit, but... * shrugs *... then that is speculation as well.
This would be a most stupid thought, or rather, so stupid a thought could never have entered into his mind; though when the God has seen fit to entrust him with it he exclaims in worship: This thought did not arise in my own heart!
I read the following on Seth Godin's blog today and thought it fit well with what I was trying to say in this post.
I think that the key, among other things, to understanding the opinions and positions of others is imagination.Try to imagine the Muslim who has lost their whole family to «collateral damage», the gay who has lost their family to rejection... let's lay down our obstinate doctrines that are so quick to offer «the only solution that WE can live with» and walk in their shoes, feel their pain and realize that our medicine is not a «one size fits all»....
There is, however, in the Galilean origin of Christianity, yet another suggestion which does not fit very well with any of the three main strands of thought.
There is, however, in the Galilean origin of Christianity yet another suggestion which does not fit well with any of the three main strands of thought.
But there may be another way in which that value is preserved; and in this book we have sought to present the possibility which fits in with general biblical thinking and which is also sufficiently in accordance with the conceptuality we have accepted.
I believe that this way of thinking fits with what I read in Pure Land Buddhist writings.
Come to think of it, your anti-atheist rhetoric would fit right in with that oppressive society.
If there are 90 % insects, and we consider them to be all very small, (which we know they are not), we could say that each pair, in order to fit on the «ARK» would need 4 square inches for two of them, plus their food for more than 40 days (Actually I think it was about a year, but we will go with about 40 days just to give the bible thumpers a chance, it supposably rained for 40 days).
Anyway, let me get your thoughts on the subject in the comment section below, and if you want to learn more about how the gospel truth that Jesus is God fits in with the offer of eternal life through Jesus, take my online course on the gospel:
Though it is not a Catholic institution, many of the leading figures at the centre, including Professor James Arthur, its director, are Catholics and much of its work fits in well with Catholic educational thinking.
My own experience in teaching religion and theology to middle - and upper - middle - class undergraduates and graduate students in America for the past decade or so certainly suggests that this way of thinking about religion fits neatly with a strong tendency toward the kind of knee - jerk relativism that is also widespread among those in the same social strata.
God knows his children and will deal with each of us in the way He sees fit, regardless of what some idiot that went to divinity school may think.
Where it seems fitting, the characters should reflect recognition and acceptance of the world situation in their thoughts and actions, although in dealing with war, our writers should minimize the «horror» aspects....
I know that the burden of proof lies upon me to show how my thesis fits with Scripture, but I am beginning to think that the real burden of proof lies upon those who want to maintain that God is violent despite all the evidence to the contrary in the life, ministry, and teachings of Jesus Christ, and especially in what He did for the entire world on the cross.
We reduce it to insignificance and remove its ontological and theological sting, by construing it as though it said that man's body was taken from the earth and in doing so we think of «body» as meaning just what fits into the framework of our standard and superficial ideas, and as something that has nothing to do with the «soul».
The teacher's approach to such problems might start from three assumptions: (a) the teacher should be concerned with how science fits into the larger framework of life, and the student should raise questions about the meaning of what he studies and its relation to other fields; (b) controversial questions can be treated, not in a spirit of indoctrination, but with an emphasis on asking questions and helping students think through assumptions and implications; an effort should be made to present viewpoints other than one's own as fairly as possible, respecting the integrity of the student by avoiding undue imposition of the lecturer's beliefs; (c) presuppositions inevitably enter the classroom presentation of many subjects, so that a viewpoint frankly and explicitly recognized may be less dangerous than one which is hidden and assumed not to exist.
I think I am with Sam in this one, if you can fit it in less words when you are finished with the long letter, and still keep everything in there you want to say then that would be great.
But we have our own purity codes these days — people we cast out from our communities or surround with Bible - wielding mobs, labels we assign to those who don't fit, conditions we place on God's grace, theological and behavioral checklists we hand out before baptism or communion, sins real or imagined we delight in taking seriously because we'd like to think they are much more severe than our own.
There is in the Galilean origin of Christianity yet another suggestion which does not fit very well with any of the three main strands of thought.
Just like people in the wilderness wearing camel hair coats and eating locusts with a side of honey disrupt us, people who think Jesus actually meant all that stuff he said don't fit in anywhere.
I don't know exactly where this fits in with my current day job and writing obligations, but I would love to do a PhD at some point that articulates a constructive Pentecostal approach to ethics in dialogue with Catholic moral theology, as I think there are significant connections.
Lear's own compelling phenomenology of irony fits, I think, rather nicely with Plato's insight that knowing involves the hierarchical logic of image and exemplar, described most famously in the Analogy of the Divided Line and the Allegory of the Cave.
I think that 46 % go along with this nonsense in order to fit in with their neighbors or even more likely for business purposes.
The idea requires much unpacking and explanation, but once understood, I think his definition fits quite well with our experience in life and with what we read in Scripture.
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