Sentences with phrase «very little book»

Except that we had no where to store our record collection, there was no where to set a drink if you wanted to sit in our favorite chairs to read a book, which was probably fine enough... because we had very little book storage in our living room anyway.
Moreover, as the name of the book suggests, it's a very little book with just 179 pages.
While educators have long fought against this lack of access and very little books in the home, Scholastic found that the problem is not quite as dire as has always been believed:

Not exact matches

All this being said, there is still obviously such a thing as too much awkwardness, and most of us will continue, despite Dahl's pep talks for the self - conscious, to strive to behave stupidly in public as little as possible She very much understands that impulse and offers many tips she dug up speaking to researchers for the book, including:
For all the post-publication focus on high - frequency trading, Lewis spends very little time with high - frequency traders in the book.
Budget 2015 left very little margin for error when it came to balancing the books, with a projected surplus of $ 1.4 billion plus an additional $ 1.0 billion as a contingency reserve, giving the federal government a $ 2.4 billion margin for error.
Self - publishing on Amazon is like putting an infinite number of your books in the center of the world's largest bookstore.It costs very little time and zero dollars to self - publish on Amazon.
My own book focuses on a very niche audience and yet consistently contributes several hundred dollars per month to my income — with little to no ongoing effort from me.
This burst of candor may strike the reader as disarming or annoying, but either way, by the standards of the countless books that offer business or self - help advice, it's startling: The whole premise of such titles is that you know very little, and whatever you think you know is dead wrong.
If you start disrupting books, especially about what little girls can be when they grow up, and if you start putting different characters in those stories, you're able to disrupt power in a very important way.
Still, most literature has focused on each country in isolation — there have been reports on UK equity crowdfunding, articles on Canadian equity crowdfunding, and books on US equity crowdfunding — but very little on equity crowdfunding in totality, and nothing at all on what campaigns from different parts of the world can learn from each other.
An excellent and much - needed book on a topic that receives a lot of media attention but very little substantive writing from the professionals themselves.
Following my initial education via financial blogs and personal finance books, I now spend very little time and energy managing my personal finances.
I read when I want, set my own work hours, and feel very little compulsion to produce anything but tangible results, which are usually the outcome of having harvested good ideas from books.
Countless articles and books recount the success stories of legendary value investors, yet there is very little information about:
The Nativity — inflated in front yards, cartooned into coloring books and fought over so fiercely in courthouses — likely bears very little resemblance to the reason for the season.
It's funny, I was chatting with god the other night, you know about girls and money and basically life in general, and then from out of no where god was like, «Yo, Chuckles, I have a job for you, it's very important that you do it, I need you to go and vote this upcoming election and I need you to vote for Rick Perry, he seems a little crazy, but don't worry, he's all good in my book».
If all you have to back your claims is a 2000 year old book that has been debunked numerous times over and has been shown to be wrong, then you have very little.
-LSB-...] I'm not unaware of the controversy surrounding the book, but I have to say I have very little time and patience for anyone who wants to parse every jot and tiddle of its theology. That's not the intent of the author.
I don't agree with anyone all the time, but this little book has it's merits and it seems to me that you have knocked it down while also advocating the abandon of the very institution through which you and countless others came to saving knowledge of Christ.
Song books no longer used, use of overhead projectors for songs, very little singing of familiar hymns, taped music, piano playing for maybe one song, no longer have a choir, altar removed, one strong Sunday School class broken up, to name a few things happening.
A little later, packing up his manuscripts, Ford happened to see «the page and the very commended phrase «old - eyed», and to notice that somehow in the rounds of fatigued retyping that used to precede a writer's final sign - off on a book in the days before word processors, the original and rather dully hybridised «cold - eyed» had somehow lost its «c» and become «old - eyed», only nobody'd noticed since they both made a kind of sense.»
A very decent little book with lots to consult and consider time and again.
I know very little of Tony Jones — I was vaguely aware of the divorce from internet reports — but I have read books by at least one other EV leader, and had some admiration for them.
In my book «Religious Literacy,» I argued that the United States is one of the most religious countries on Earth, and yet Americans know very little about their own religions and even less about the religions of others.
Thanks especially to the critical study of Dr. C. Harold Dodd, as summed up in his notable little book The Apostolic Preaching, we have become familiar with the word kerygma, Greek for «the proclamation»; and taught by Dr. Dodd and those who have followed the line of enquiry which he laid down, we have come to see that this kerygma was the very heart of the earliest Christianity.
(Note: I realize these sales only apply the U.S. I wish I could change that, but we authors have very little influence over when and where our books are discounted.)
Oh, the ideas are all there, but the book contains very little of the exegetical evidence which is needed to defend the ideas.
If nothing else... this new book by Wright solves very little, and the debate will continue for quite some time!
When Herman and I wrote that book, we had very little hope of persuading the dominant economic community to change.
Any of these books might be used to help a group consider how, in our highly competitive global economy, we should interpret Jesus» teaching, «Whoever is faithful in a very little is faithful also in much; and whoever is dishonest in a very little is dishonest also in much» (Luke 16:10).
The Republicans were freaked about JFK's Catholic issue... Then the GOP» ers are very concerned about Islamic Brothers and Sharia law rule... BUT, they seem little problem with the Book of Mormon... Hummmmmm... are they leading us to the «land of (bilk) milk and honey» now, and prosperity?
At evening time it is, with equal ceremony, locked away for the night in a specially prepared vault for safekeeping.11 It is not a little strange that a faith which rules out idolatry should have come, in the end, very near, if not quite, to making their sacred book an object of worship.
It might be more entertaining than many of the other books on writing I have read, but it still provided very little to help me in my own writing.
Yet, for nearly six centuries, countless Christians have found that studying Thomas's little book is a very good way to start trying.
A pretest asking students to identify various biblical books and the people and places mentioned therein, and to complete a few well - known quotations, showed how very little biblical knowledge most teenagers possess — even those who have attended church schools for years.
Since all of Whitehead's theologically relevant works are readily available in inexpensive editions, there is very little from them in this book.
Thomas Altizer's book, Mircea Eliade and the Dialectic of the Sacred, was published late in 1963 and has so far attracted very little attention.
Readable, lively, inspiring, encouraging — and I had not particularly expected that because the title made me feel that this might be an irritating, bright and breezy book with very little useful content and lots of platitudes.
Everybody is interested in prophecy and the Book of Revelation, but Buackham's book is sparking controversy, because he says that the book of Revelation contains very little prophecy, and is instead, a book which uses coded imagery to criticize the Roman Empire and retell the story of the Fall of Jerusalem in ADBook of Revelation, but Buackham's book is sparking controversy, because he says that the book of Revelation contains very little prophecy, and is instead, a book which uses coded imagery to criticize the Roman Empire and retell the story of the Fall of Jerusalem in ADbook is sparking controversy, because he says that the book of Revelation contains very little prophecy, and is instead, a book which uses coded imagery to criticize the Roman Empire and retell the story of the Fall of Jerusalem in ADbook of Revelation contains very little prophecy, and is instead, a book which uses coded imagery to criticize the Roman Empire and retell the story of the Fall of Jerusalem in ADbook which uses coded imagery to criticize the Roman Empire and retell the story of the Fall of Jerusalem in AD 70.
There is very little about the free - exercise clause in Hamburger's book, and the seeming equation of the disestablishment / separation issue with «American religious freedom» more generally seems to leave out one half of a complex and at - least - two - sided constitutional reality.
it's funny - one of the biggest criticisms of Christianity is that it's been so busy reading and re-writing its own book that it's paid very little attention to other people's books, except to generally abuse their readers.
Unfortunately, there was very little genuine discussion in Campolo's book.
The book «Hitlers Pope» came out and was widely publicized by the news but the rebuttals, too numerous to mention here, got very little attention here.
But gee, I'd sure hate to ask you guys to consider a slightly different interpretation of a very old book just for little ol' me.
First, while there is little in the Bible that could be called science, the book of Genesis is very clear about where the universe came from.
Thanks to Professor Braithwaite, I can tell you a little about them; a little, because the minutes are not records of the discussions, but only of titles of papers read, of stands taken in a vote at the end of each meeting, and of such very short comments as members chose to write into the book as they voted.
I was a very firm believer until I read a very unknown little book in a small town dusty library.
As most people go to church for only and hour on the Pagan sun god's day of worship, and only get a very watered down feel good sermon with a text book drummed into them interpretation, there is very little Bible and Scripture in church.
It's already up The entire year can be found by clicking on «scripture writing» in the little menu on the very top right of this page, up above the picture of my books I'll try to drop a direct link here when I'm at my computer next (on phone now).
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z