Basically, if you think the entire bible
is the literal word of god, you go to hell for being stupid.
Whether your dog is chasing a dangerous wild animal or diving toward medicine or chocolate that was dropped on the floor, the leave it command can
be a literal life saver.
So is the idea of selling apps to simulate physical objects, although we hope he was
n't being literal about paying an extra dollar to simply simulate a video screen.
Given that a good gaming session will last at least an hour, a heavy headset can
be a literal pain in the neck.
It's not even always clear what is imagined and what is real, what is symbolic and
what is literal.
Having said that, whether the six
days were literal 24 h x 6 or longer than that to accommodate evolution is a matter of one's interpretation.
Has art become such a thing that it can't handle metaphor anymore, and so people have to
be literal about it?
The problem is who is to say what
part is literal and what part is metaphor.
Further, he asks the viewer to consider the loss and recovery of visual information and at what point is an image recognizable
without being a literal representation.
Its beautiful hand - drawn animation
is a literal work of art and shows how old - school methods can still find a place in current trends.
There are many bedrooms that
are a literal dream for children — and you can see some of these here.
There
's a literal spring in my step when I wear them, which is something I'm definitely not used to, but something I do enjoy.
They will claim perfect compatibility between their story and genuine study by presenting each exposed belief as having
never been literal / relevant / real.
Obviously I can not do so in any literal way, but I doubt that the original
author was literal in intention either.
All that to say, a church
split is literal hell on a pastor and I am not kidding that I had to go to counseling to get beyond it.
Having enough time and energy to stand under that hot, blessed spray of
water is a literal gift from above.
There seems to be some kind of disconnect between knowing and doing in the teenage brain — and new work in neuroscience suggests this
disconnect is literal as well as figurative.