Sentences with phrase «what pretty things»

I always love to see what pretty things are blooming, and happening at your lovely Rose Cottage.
I always look forward to seeing what pretty things you create!
Oooh what pretty things:) Thanks for adding my modern + vintage post here!
What pretty things you've chosen for your special occasion!
Oh wow, What a pretty thing, you have going on for people here Mira.
That looks fantastic - what a pretty thing to look at while in the kitchen.

Not exact matches

«It's never a good thing when the markets are spending time focused on rancour and brinkmanship in Washington instead of being focused on what are some pretty reasonable fundamentals that we're getting,» said Craig Fehr, Canadian markets specialist at Edward Jones in St. Louis.
Looking into a crystal ball isn't exactly a scientific thing to do, but if you ask the right kinds of smart people you can get a pretty good idea what's likely to come down the pike.
«One of the things I learned how to do really well is talk around something,» she says, «so even if I don't have the words for exactly what I want, I can still express myself pretty well.»
When things change, I do go through that «Aw, crap,» moment and grieve for what once was, but I'm pretty good at adapting to new realities.
After reading my new book, Real Leaders Don't Follow, an old friend and business associate who's had a long and successful career, Ziv Azmanov, sent me an email that, among other things, does a pretty effective job of explaining what distinguishes real entrepreneurs from the pack:
«I think as a company, if you can get those two things right — having a clear direction on what you are trying to do and bringing in great people who can execute on the stuff — then you can do pretty well.»
«Things are working pretty well, and I would be worried that if I raised rates significantly with negative interest rates in Europe, I would be very worried about what that would do to the flow of funds.»
«What the key thing is to realize is the futures market has pretty much supplemented the cash market, and that's where the trading activity is,» said Jerry Lucas, senior strategist at UBS Wealth Management.
He has since said of the potentially life - shattering revelation, «I'd say it was a pretty dramatic event, but it wasn't what I'd call traumatizing... As a matter of fact, it made quite a few things clearer to me.
I was kind of like I said interested in gambling or at least speculating or figuring things out and then taking a calculated gamble and what they were telling me was don't try, there were saying that no one can beat the market and the stock prices are efficient and just through simple observation looking at the newspaper and they used to have the 52 - week high low prices in the newspaper, it seemed unreasonable that you know the fair price was 51 day and eight months later, it was 120, and that was pretty much every stock had that kind of range every year and it didn't make sense to me that the fundamentals of the underlying businesses were actually changing that much.
«What was communicated to me strongly was that thousands and maybe tens of thousands of apps were doing the exact same thing and that this was a pretty normal use case and a normal situation for usage of Facebook data,» Kogan said.
Coworking is now at the size and scale that, five years from now, it will look pretty similar to what it is today — barring some cataclysmic thing or some incredible wildcard.
Your link building strategy and services are the only things we have done, so it's pretty obvious you know what the hell you are doing.
It'd be phenomenal to keep that up, but in terms of growth, it's more about people taking action and it's like I really want to measure the results, which is like pretty impossible to do, but at the same time that's why I really like things what we're doing with the student loan debt movement, where people are reporting back with how much student loan debt they're paying off.
What do Atheist fear... I think they are humans too, so they fear pretty much the same things that the Faithful do.
But whether its going in a better direction, I mean the funny thing is, no matter what direction it goes, no matter how great it is, there's going to be a bunch of shmucks that are trying to like make money off of it, and it's going to repeat itself: The amount of bands that sound like various other bands that once were great... it multiplies so quick, it's pretty funny man.
The themes in it [are] the ever - present themes of adultery, as well as a pretty heavy drinking theme in the song (which probably comes from the fact that I drink pretty heavily), but the most interesting part of it to me, the thing I was most excited about when I wrote it was the bridge toward the end of the song where there's a car fire in the parking lot and all that stuff and the comment «what a cruel God we've got.»
The fact is if you believe the words of God and the teachings of Jesus, this practice is an abomination and nothing that anyone can do to make it pretty, nice, sweet, loving or any other thing to make it acceptable can override what the Lord says about it.
One thing I am pretty sure of though... My blog posts will continue to share with you the journey of me trying to fill in the holes, connect the dots, and put into words what I'm thinking and feeling.
Churches are usually pretty good about valuing motherhood, but I think that sometimes the intense focus on that aspect of what Christian womanhood means can lead to us devaluing a lot of other amazing things that women can (and do) do for God.
Nevertheless, I will order Jacobsen's book to see what he has to say, even though I've pretty much given up on finding answers to these sorts of things in books.
As for what Jesus taught, he said some pretty disturbing things about God's wrath upon the earth, and then in his ascended state, he told John the graphic horrific violence that would come at the end of days.
(By the way, one thing that atheists - and I'm not saying you are one - do is they will believe that we can know what happened a billion years ago out in space, but we can't know pretty well what happened 2,000 years ago).
This is a desperate error, or rather a desperate mistake, which overlooks (yes, and what is worse, it overlooks the fact that what it overlooks is pretty nearly the best thing that can be said of a man, since far worse often occurs)-- it overlooks the fact that the majority of men do never really manage in their whole life to be more than they were in childhood and youth, namely, immediacy with the addition of a little dose of self - reflection.
I'm pretty sure people prayed for the children of Holocaust, if they knew what was going on, but God is never of the world, and we can not think that God does things by which we think is justice.
It's that living under law thing that kills us (the Spirit gives life but the letter kills), trying to live up to standards and rules, principles and guidelines, etc... The church these days has pretty much no idea what grace even is, and if you start talking about God's love, I mean his real love based only on Christ's merit, people call you a heretic.
If what you interpret Paul as saying is that before creating all the myriad galaxies and star systems God decided that They would put some humans on the third planet from an insignificant star on a little arm of a middling galaxy and that the first hominids chosen role would be to perform pretty much to spec and do something silly and rebellious (arguably without sufficient information as to consequences for themselves and their off spring, oh, and for serpents) and cause affront to the tripartite godhead warranting separation of Gods grace from all their offspring; then we are left with people being chosen from way back before the Big Bang to do some terrible things like killing babies or betraying Jesus who was chosen on the same non date (time didn't exist before creation) to die in a fairly nasty fashion and thereby appease the righteous wrath of himself and his fellow Trinitarians by paying a penalty as a substitute for all future sins (of believers?)
It just helped me kind of realign and put things in perspective and say, «You know what man, life is not pretty, and it's not neat, but God is still God.
«I'm more just working through things on my own and just putting it out there for people to listen to, and I'm pretty positive... I think people will hear that in the record and what I was afraid of at first, I think, people are actually going to find refreshing maybe.»
I pretty much agreed with most of what you have said and i think that the sinners prayer has been misused as a get out of Jail free card.A couple of things that people miss is that God is in charge.As soon as you offer yourself to God and accept Jesus Chris the holy spirit has liberty to work on you.Because he loves us he will discipline us so that we do repent of our sins.The downside of living a walk like that you are a hypocrite until you admit your sinfulness the holy spirit can not help us because of our pride.The second part was you talking about disciplining the flesh personally you cant discipline that which is corrupt our hearts are deceitfully wicked we need new hearts no amount of effort on our part will transform our hearts that is the work of the holy spirit he changes our hearts so that we no longer desire to sin we would rather serve the Lord with all our hearts instead.brentnz
Sorry Neville did nt mean to imply that you meant the other things in fact i am agreeing with what you said in fact and pretty much with your point of view on most of your comments we have discussed.I was adding my own thoughts that that there is so much more to what Jesus did for us on the cross.
I know in great detail what things look like from their side, and the hardships they encounter, and well,» rural Nova Scotia» pretty much means «poor» when it comes to church coffers and minister's pay.
Griffin's reply is that this is irrelevant even if true.3 The reason it is irrelevant is that even if the process deity got things pretty much the way he intended, there is a «big gap» between such a world and the world that would have been created by the God of traditional theism, whose ability to create is limited only by what is logically possible.
they can be pretty convincing on the whole «come and belong» thing... so i would say arm them with what they need to know and give them the self - esteem to be able to stand for themselves.
I think God is pretty unique, he knows material things can not be proved by Faith, as Faith is whats needed to access the Spirit of God.
My experience is that he's pretty persistent in showing me what those things are (and that my fellow Christians sometimes help and sometimes don't).
It was God who discovered the doctrine of the God - Man, and now Christendom has got the thing turned topsy - turvy and imputes to God consanguinity, so that the concession God has made means pretty much what in these times it means when a king grants a freer constitution — and one knows well enough what that means, «He pretty well had to.»
If that's all they do during the hour, I wonder what they say, unless they repeat pretty much the same thing every day.
Pretty much what I do to keep stress at bay, but if we're taking things to another level of indulgence, I'd say anything water - related: a Japanese onsen bath, hammam, a swim in the sea or even just a plunge in the pool.
They are a kind of ridiculous thing to have to buy, because your oven should know what temperature it is, but it can tell you if your oven runs hot or cold, if it's all the time or just in certain temperature ranges... and they are usually pretty cheap in the supermarket kitchenware aisle.
Of all the wonderful recipes in Ready for dessert, this one's definitely the one that I've made time and again, tweaking it slightly at first and more significatively as I got confident with it to the point where I'm pretty sure that no matter what ingredients and quantities you put in there, if you do the one - minute - intensive - beating thing, you'll get awesome brownies every time.
It was late in the day and the place was pretty devoid of products, so I'll go back earlier in the day and see what things look like then.
I had allowed myself a little bit of leeway as I felt I was getting pretty darn good at knowing what things usually contained gluten, even seemingly harmless foods like imitation crab (whodathunk it'd be in a fish product?).
What really sucks is that most commercial vegan «cheeses» that we turn to in lieu of the real thing are pretty much junk food, just as bad for your health as dairy.
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