Sentences with phrase «very real sense»

In a very real sense, many voted for Trump in spite of who he is.
In a very real sense, therapy can teach people how to do what they need to feel better.
In a very real sense, we were given all this technology without a manual on how to manage the impact on our lives.
Creativity, in the case of open relationships, means, in a very real sense, to create something new.
«The human mind is, in a very real sense, much bigger and more expansive than the skull that we imagine to house it,» Siegel says in this Networker article.
In a very real sense, personal branding requires that you be courageous about really «owning» yourself and acknowledging yourself for the strengths and value you bring to the table.
The price cut from the top - end Windows Phone handsets gets you full blown Windows Phone 7.5 in a large screened device with no ZTE - added extra apps or tweaks, so in a very real sense this is a taste of the Windows Phone operating system without bells and whistles.
In a very real sense, the original energy used to create those bitcoins was repurposed and used to create XCP.
In a very real sense, the software itself defines the asset - and, therefore, the price that investors are willing to pay for it.
So in a very real sense, we are making the rules up as we go.
We assist our clients in a very real sense, by taking the lead and not hesitating where necessary to steer towards tactical and strategic decisions when much is at stake.
Those «others» include, by the way, a type of outfit that is not usually thought of as a «public interest litigant,» but which in a very real sense is exactly that: the federal Department of Justice and its provincial counterparts (which I will refer to as the DOJs).
It is in a very real sense a valuable resource acquired during the marriage...»
In a very real sense law firms have no real interest in simplifying the litigation and judicial processes.
This point is convincing, given the fact that, as the authors point out, the jurisprudence lacks finality in a very real sense: in access to documents cases, EU courts can not serve the institutions injunctions to disclose documents that are subject of the judicial dispute (pp. 7 - 8).
In a very real sense the surface determines the temperature of the atmosphere, NOT the other way round: the atmosphere transfers no net energy to the surface, all the energy flow is in the other direction.
In a very real sense it's not entirely the president's fault.
In a very real sense, the current warming period is a net biological feedback to the warmth of an interglacial.
In a very real sense, what happens next is up to us.
Such persons are, in a very real sense, not sane.
They are seeking authority in a very real sense, for the sake of having an authority.
In a very real sense, China's PV module industry is vulnerable to the whims of these quality certification bodies (or if one might dare read into it, protectionist measures to protect local PV industries).
This means that, in a very real sense, the main support we have for Climate Change is the empirical data!
With both, however, that nowhere provides a very real sense of place.
Yang attempts to close this distance in a work that explores our shared elemental equivalencies; as inherent parts of the Milky Way galaxy, our corporeal bodies are, in a very real sense, celestial bodies.
Written in the years while he was studying at the East Anglian School of Painting and Drawing, they offer a compelling view of his artistic practice and although often playful and light - hearted, hint at a very real sense of ambition.»
A founding father of the International art market, those strategies included innovative solo exhibitions and even monthly stipends that, in a very real sense, ensured the creation of so many cherished artworks.
5 In a very real sense, Rauschenberg's decision to limit his palette to black and white in the early 1950s was a return to basics, and he was careful to distinguish his approach from the thinking that guided the overdetermined psychological and emotional connections to blackness often associated with abstract expressionist canvases of the 1940s.
In a very real sense, the 2012 Whitney Biennial already has.
Some, too, is a very real sense of community, and one could see both at work in Bushwick Open Studios.
«So, in a very real sense, what you're seeing with Knack 2 is the items that ended up on the cutting room floor.»
Time being a factor in these scenarios helps build the very real sense of tension, as the scenario shows that if you dawdle as Conner, more people get hurt as Daniel starts shooting at the police around him.
There's a very real sense of nostalgia and retro feel that makes it easy to think you're listening to a museum audiobook with samples from the era.
For those who aren't in too much of a hurry, this can add to the very real sense in which visitors to Playa Dominical are heading off the beaten track toward a hidden secret.
«In a very real sense, not having an emergency fund is the worst money mistake a person can make because it often leads to other serious money mistakes.»
In a very real sense investors and the financial services industry need us to believe in a positive and realizable ERP.
I mean, I've written before about how frugality buys freedom, about how, in a very real sense, time is money — and money is time.
In a very real sense you are being your own banker.
In a very real sense, you buy at retail prices and sell at wholesale prices.
The former is, in a very real sense, pretend money.
In a very real sense, we learn by trial and error, so making mistakes is part of the procedure.
In a very real sense, investors abandon stocks at the end of a bear market because stocks have repeatedly proved themselves to be unreliable and disappointing.
So, in a very real sense, this data covers only a small section of the worldwide book market.
This means that in a very real sense authors should avoid profanity in narrative and even in dialogue just as they do - ly adverbs and other easy forms of telling.
As I understand it, the synesthete experiences these cross-sensory perceptions in a very real sense - they are not «in the mind's eye» but experienced physically and consistently (e.g. hearing a particular piece of music would trigger a particular taste every time).
Her two daughters, she says, «in a very real sense grew up in Mister Rogers» Neighborhood.»
The actual power to decide what to teach rests with state and local governments — and often, in a very real sense, with individual schools and teachers.
In a very real sense, parents of third, fourth and fifth graders are their student's at home learning coach, providing them with instruction from a certified teacher and an environment that facilitates learning.
It is, in a very real sense, a meeting of minds where individuals are able to exchange thinking.
Urban schools reinforce the student perception that teachers bear final responsibility for what they learn.By allowing passive witnesses, the schools support these student perceptions that all relationships are (indeed rewarding) students for being essentially authoritarian rather than mutual.As youth see the world, they are compelled to go to school while teachers are paid to be there.Therefore, it is the job of the teacher to make them learn.Every school policy and instructional decision which is made without involving students — and this is almost all of them — spreads the virus that principals and teachers rather than students must be the constituency held accountable for learning.In a very real sense students are being logical.In an authoritarian, top - down system with no voice for those at the bottom, why should those «being done to» be held accountable?
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