Sentences with phrase «with general book»

Rajah Club has a well stocked library with general books and pictorial guidebooks offering glimpses of Indian Maharajas who used rule their kingdom before India became democracy.
Contact us 24/7 The Priority Telephone Service can help with general bookings, Flight Reward bookings, Upgrade requests and general servicing, available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Not exact matches

With that info shared through a common system with the sales department, the general manager and the web team, you eliminate the possibility of double - booking an ad space or disappointing clients with less prominent advertising, Pace sWith that info shared through a common system with the sales department, the general manager and the web team, you eliminate the possibility of double - booking an ad space or disappointing clients with less prominent advertising, Pace swith the sales department, the general manager and the web team, you eliminate the possibility of double - booking an ad space or disappointing clients with less prominent advertising, Pace swith less prominent advertising, Pace says.
The general argument, as reflected in the title of the book, is that unless we progress with people in mind, as opposed to in spite of them, the world will continue to be a very treacherous place to navigate.
The book gives general descriptions of the sites, with some qualitative judgments woven in.
Kauffman Foundation scholar Sam Arbesman made media waves recently with his book The Half - Life of Facts, which reminds the general reader of an obvious but often overlooked fact of scientific progress.
I was tired of books with stories about generals, parables about mice, and endless scientific studies with numbers that could point any which way.
With a new president and a new rewards program, the big book retailer looks to expand into the world of general merchandise.
Indeed, the impetus for our book, «JP Madoff: The Unholy Alliance Between America's Biggest Bank and America's Biggest Crook» was Holder's refusal as Attorney General to prosecute a single criminal banker for the litany of indisputable crimes committed in the last eight years and his sale of get - out - of - jail - free cards to senior officers of JPMorgan Chase so that they were not prosecuted for their complicity in Madoff's crimes and for their dishonesty with respect to the «London Whale» scandal.
The book starts with the general investment principles of Mobius, which are clearly derived from value investing «Graham - style» following his mentor John Templeton.
And it ended with disclosures from the disgraced former FBI Director's anti-Trump book and the Department of Justice Inspector General's report released last week regarding the corrupt behavior of fired FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe.
I await confirmation from the researchers at Think Progress, but I suspect that the religious right's obsession with morays in particular and eels in general, derives not from the canonical Book of Job but from the non-canonical early church writing, The Epistle of Barnabas, which in verse 10:5 reads:
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».
My colleague Bruce Marshall has convincingly argued that starting with general possibilities Rahner never really gets to the particular as particular; and Reno at the very end of his book says as much himself.
Despite my general sympathy with what Dreher seeks to do in this book, I am less enthusiastic about other facets of his argument.
our sharpest minds would be schooled HARD by a supreme creator... not the other way around... an average joe off the street could write a better, more moral book than the Bible and utterly destroy the god of any of the holy books in a general knowledge debate with ease.
His writings have come down to us bound together with the prophecies of Isaiah of Jerusalem, two centuries earlier, and some other material, under the general title, «The Book of Isaiah».
Easily the best «Jesus book» of our time, this has to be read with the consciousness that its author was writing for the general public rather than specifically for theologians or theological students.
The Report refers to the book Education of India by Arthur Mayhew, the Director of Public Instruction in Bengal with approval of his personal view that the «moral progress in India depends on the general transformation of education by explicit recognition of the Spirit of Christ».
In fact, this book made a huge difference in the way I pastored and even dealt with people in general.
This illustrates one of the general problems with the book: the author does not seem to be clear about her target audience, so she includes information ranging from the basic to the specialist.
That the Bible is the record of centuries of religious change, that its early concepts are allied with primitive, animistic faiths, that between such origins and the messages of Hebrew prophets and Christian evangelists an immensely important development is reflected in the Book — this general view is the familiar possession of many in both synagogue and church.
I always attributed this disconnect to my general frustrations with modern evangelicalism — that it's been hijacked by the Republican Party, that it's in a perpetual state of defensiveness and «wartime» posturing, that it has closed itself off to science and independent thought, that it has lost sight of the message of Jesus regarding the Kingdom of God, that it has become commercialized and shallow — all the things we «emergers» like to write books and articles about.
By no means are all ethical studies devoted to such theoretical matters, yet even the many books and articles that deal with some specific moral problem will typically address these general matters in the course of their discussions.
The remainder of the book (chapters 4 — 7) provide a detailed explanation of how to study and teach the texts of the General Epistles, beginning with interpreting them from the Greek and moving on into exegetical outlines and homiletical exposition.
Senator Jeff Flake refused to endorse Trump in the 2016 general election and recently wrote a book explaining that the GOP should return to its healthy roots, which correspond with Flake's policy preferences.
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.
Christians will find this aspect of the book especially challenging and, in general, there is much to disagree with in Goodman's argument by both Christians and Jews.
In a little - noticed resolution passed overwhelmingly by the 2001 General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), delegates declared that the theology of the series is «not in accord with our Reformed understanding» of the New Testament Book of Revelation.
It's a book that would be useful to share and discuss in a Catholic young mums group, especially for those who need a good general introduction to the idea of daily prayer and friendship with Christ.
In that book, written for the general public and not for scholars, I suggested that love includes the following elements or aspects: commitment, mutuality, fidelity, hopefulness, union — and that its goal is fulfillment in and with another or with others.
To enter, all you need to do is leave a comment below this blog post with your favorite quote or chapter from the book, or just a general comment about why you want in on the giveaway, by Monday April 18th at 9 a.m. EST..
This is not, however, an addition to the legislation of the Qur» an, for a careful study will show that each of these traditions expresses the spirit of a more general teaching in the Book, even though the ties connecting each tradition with its appropriate foundation in the Qur» an are not easily discovered.
Instead, the reader is presented in the first half of the book with a general thematic overview.
My reflections arose, as I have indicated, in part from formative books and teachers, but they also grew out of grappling with Scripture (one of the lightning bolts here was the simple but profound insight of realizing once again the ineradicable connection of form and content — for instance, what is said in a parable can not be said in any other way), and with the complex business, endemic to academic theologians, of, as Kierkegaard would put it, becoming a Christian (not in general or for someone else but in particular and for me).
An utterly fascinating ramble through the constituting stories of Jewish and Christian tradition, combining solid scholarship and intellectual liveliness with a winsome style that makes the book a delight for both the specialist and the general reader.
Teachers of Asian religions tend to look upon general introductions to the religions of the world as useful only for quick reference, and to prefer books dealing with a specific religion, supplemented with readings from original sources.
Sounds like a terribly ignorant book, written by an atheist with minimal understanding of Christian theology or religious thinking in general.
The Interpreter's One - Volume Commentary on the Bible: Introduction and Commentary for Each Book of the Bible Including the Apocrypha, With General Articles.
But the general tendency to this point has been to praise the book and its author, with only a few reservations, for conjuring up something marvelous and elaborate and darkly absorbing.
They include the naming of angels (Michael, Raphael and so on); a personal Devil (which Satan later became) with accompanying demons; a Book of Life which records the deeds of people during their lifetime; a coming cosmic conflict in which the forces of evil will be finally overthrown; the separation of the soul from the body at death; a general resurrection and a universal judgement; and an afterlife with rewards and punishments.
The title given this book, Becoming and Belonging, indicates the general approach that I have taken: to exist as human is to exist as an instance of «becoming» or developing (for better or worse) and is also to belong with others of our kind in a great enterprise in which each one of us belongs and to which each one of us makes her or his contribution, for good or for ill.
I had intended to communicate, and I here reiterate, my general appreciation for George Weigel's book, as well as my agreement with almost all of the specific suggestions made for reform.
I agree with the general thrust of his book.
«We will coordinate this work with the various efforts already underway to develop global structures and a new General Book of Discipline for our church,» the proposal stated.
Scientists are people, they are flawed, and I'm pretty sure God did not provide us with the mental ability to fully understand how he pulled everything off, but either way, In General science spends it's time trying to figure out how God did it... not why... you want to know why... I propose to you, as you suggested I open another book and learn, i propose you open a Bible and learn why God Created you.
Three central ideas from this book are in the process of becoming part of the general intellectual equipment of a good many younger observers of the American scene, both those with and those without an interest in what is usually called theology.
Her first book, Gatherings: Bringing People Together with Food was shortlisted for the 2015 Taste Canada Food Writing Awards in the Best General Cookbook category.
A decoction of leaves and roots is placed in a hot bath to relieve general body aches and pains in Paraguay, and according to Whitelaw Ainslie, M.D., in his 1826 book, Materia Indica, «With hog lard, Capsicum forms a good liniment for paralytic limbs.»
I am also impressed with the general layout of the book.
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