Sentences with phrase «with traditional end»

At the end of Thirty Flights of Loving, Chung greeted players not with traditional end credits but with a meditation on Bernoulli's principle of fluid dynamics in regards to flight.
That's now becoming quite a common thing in many schools who are doing away with that traditional end of semester report, and really they're developing a profile of a student and responding to their individual needs.»
However, at the «eleventh hour,» Disney changed its mind and decided to go with the traditional ending.

Not exact matches

Traditional, more - strict loan terms have not always ended up with the greatest social impact.
He described a plan that stitches together mostly traditional, supply - side prescriptions — cutting the top individual tax rate to 33 % and the corporate rate to 15 %, ending the estate tax, and imposing a moratorium on new regulation — with his protectionist approach to trade that's had business howling.
At the end of the day, though, even though the company experiments with films and design sets centered around popular franchises, traditional LEGO bricks are still the main focus.
Westfield has been seen as a pioneer in U.S. mall redevelopment, melding traditional mall retailers with atypical mall fixtures like upscale food courts, high - end restaurants, bars, cinemas and boutique fashion outlets.
End on a high note with a traditional Irish sticky toffee pudding for dessert.
According to Fidelity, one of the largest administrators of retirement plans in America with ~ 7 million accounts, the average IRA balance — including both traditional IRAs and Roth IRAs — stood at $ 81,100 at the end of 2012, up 53 % from 2008 when balances hit their lowest point since the market meltdown.
While the device could theoretically be made as thin as a traditional watch, you'd end up with far less power than needed with current technology.
It's strange to think that if Microsoft doesn't push a consumer turnaround with Windows 8 and the forthcoming update, rumored to be called Windows 8.1 or Windows Blue, we may soon see the end of the traditional PC.
I think the problem with that method is you end up buying more shares when the market is up and fewer shares when the market is down, vs. traditional DCA.
Instead of traditional venture capital firms investing in startups from PowerPoint to IPO, there are angel investors and seed rounds on one end and traditional public market investors investing in private unicorn rounds on the other, with venture capital firms somewhere in the middle.
Rejecting traditional campaign techniques in favor of social media, the party pushed its agenda of, first, ending the generous state subsidies and salaries paid to Italy's political parties and elected politicians and, second, replacing them with a vaguely conceived Internet - based representation system.
Offering only numbers is something that traditional brokerage firms do, and a lot of time is leads to deals that end up falling through the floor, because the amount of money a business needs often has little to do with why they need it or the reasons their current financial situation is the way it is.
Unfortunately, subsequent G - 20 summits returned to their traditional lethargy and misguided preoccupation with fiscal austerity, monetary normalization, and moral hazard, ending up missing opportunities to accelerate the recovery.
The blockchain - based application, Circle, is a payment application with a simple proposition: «[S] end money anywhere, in any currency, without the friction (transfer delays and fees) of traditional clearance options.»
A household with two good traditional pensions plus Social Security, and zero savings, might be in fine shape while a household with $ 1 million in the bank and no guaranteed lifetime income ends up struggling.
So for all those saying that «Bitcoin is a bubble» and that «it will end in tears» please take a look at the traditional markets and tell me with a straight face that this is heading to a happy place.
It may seem somewhat trite to invoke the freedom of creation as part of the works and ends of divine love, or to argue that the highest good of the creature — divinizing union with God in love — requires a realm of «secondary causality» in which the rational wills of God's creatures are at liberty; nonetheless, whether the traditional explanations of how sin and death have been set loose in the world satisfy one or not, they certainly render the claim that an omnipotent and good God would never allow unjust suffering simply vacuous.
Without the traditional doctrines, you may, to be sure, end up with something very interesting, but you will not end up with a Christian.
There are four affirmations about Jesus Christ that historically have been stressed in Christian faith: (1) Jesus is truly human, bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh, living a human life under the same human conditions any one of us faces — thus Christology, statement of the significance of Jesus, must start «from below,» as many contemporary theologians are insisting; (2) Jesus is that one in whom God energizes in a supreme degree, with a decisive intensity; in traditional language he has been styled «the Incarnate Word of God»; (3) for our sake, to secure human wholeness of life as it moves onward toward fulfillment, Jesus not only lived among us but also was crucified for us — this is the point of talk about atonement wrought in and by him; (4) death was not the end for him, so it is not as if he never existed at all; in some way he triumphed over death, or was given victory over it, so that now and forever he is a reality in the life of God and effective among humankind.
To start with man as already free, as traditional thought and the existentialists like Sartre do, is to end up either depreciating human freedom as the traditionalists do to save divine foreknowledge, or denying God altogether to save man as the existentialists do.
Which ends up being subjective in practice, as any number of Christians will draw upon their own combination of biblical, traditional and intuitional ideas, with vastly differing results, but all equally believing that these ideas came directly from the Spirit and represent the only «true» morality of God.
And with Heidegger I would claim that the end of our traditional forms of knowledge realized in terms of technology signals the beginning of a new cultural, or perhaps post-cultural, sensibility.
The letter ends with a traditional Islamic phrase, «Peace to whoever follows the path» — the path, that is, of belief in and faithful response to the one God.
In an article written with his brother (Randall), Basinger argues that traditional free will theism, if consistently thought through, ends up with the same implications for the relation between God and nature as does process theism.
Three recipes - Aged (aka Traditional Medium Fruitcake, not dark, not light: medium), Ageless (aka Fruited Tea Brack - no aging required, low end, a lovely tea cake and New Age (aka Golden Apricot Pecan Fruit Cake - good aged or not - for candied fruit loathers - bound together with a lashing of Triple Sec of Cointreau).
I've been making preserved lemons for years, and I've learned to skip the traditional lemon preparation where you slice each into quarters without cutting all the through the lemon on one end (so the quarters are still attached), fill the lemon flowers with salt, re-form the lemon, and pack everything into the jar with more salt.
Take the classic, traditional, French Provencal stewed vegetable dish, Ratatouille, add some protein packed chickpeas, lemon juice and a lightly sautéed onion and you end up with this deliciously tasty vegetarian ratatouille and chickpea stew.
In the traditional version they use a buttery pastry for the rolls and then they fill them with a butter, cream cheese, egg, heavy cream and shredded cheese mixture, so that at the end they can roll them in more shredded cheese again.
In the end, however, we decided to stick with the traditional method of producing coconut oil through the fermentation process.
The yummy dish reminds me of a collision between French toast and a lunch box ham sandwich — the traditional version, a favorite during my childhood, is made with ham and cheese book - ended between white bread, dipped in an egg mixture and then pan fried or even deep fried (gasp) with raspberry preserves and powdered sugar to garnish!
«That can include the traditional quick - service in a dine - in restaurant to having a very high - end experience with $ 100 bottles of wine, for example.
In the end, I decide to make a very untraditional savoury pancake (I'm not calling it okonomiyake as it's really nothing like the traditional version) and ended up with something that was quite impressive in its simplicity — lovely fresh, clean flavours, loads of veggies and delicious pesto on top, these pancakes come together really quickly to make a delicious and healthy breakfast, lunch or dinner.
The basic proportions are easy to remember but I like to step it up in some traditional ways — half a vanilla bean, a splash of almond extract at the end — and some that are decidedly less so, like cooking it with a bay leaf, a trick I picked up from this one and I know it sounds odd, but don't knock it until you've tried it, okay?
Add a can of well drained pineapple chunks near the end of the stir frying for the traditional sweet and sour pork with pineapple.
I did bow to the traditional with the whipped cream dolloped on the cake, which was delicious with coffee at the end of the feast.
If you are vegan I have placed in some substitutions for the raw grass - fed butter, but of course you will lose that traditional buttery fudge taste and end up with a slightly more coconutty one but I don't think this is a bad thing and all, and you will probably find that it feels like an even cleaner treat doing so.
In the end, this is a pretty traditional potato salad with a nice bold flavor, a light but creamy texture and less fat and calories.
Dear Cate, I'm Clio and I'm from Greece.I really like your blog, very good work.I found the Greece section -LRB-!!!!) and I wanted to give you some info about the avgolemono soup recipe.Here, in Greece, we don't cook this soup plain with just rice, well, I certainly haven't heard it before.We have chicken avgolemono soup which is very popular, and there is a hole range of avgolemono recipes, soups and casserole dishes.Avgolemono is a sauce, which is done at the end and finishes the recipe with eggs (avgo in greek) and lemons.For example, we have «lamp with lettuce avgolemono, meatballs avgolemono soup, zuccnini stuffed with mince avgolemono, an easter soup with liver chopped and fresh onions, very traditional, we also have dolmades, this is turkish dish, it is like little parcels made by cabbage leaves that you steam a little and then are filled with mince, rice and herbs, and avgolemono.And many others.
Every Seder (traditional Passover meal) should end with these cookies.
The seven - course meal includes Salchichon, Cheese and Torta from Spain; German - inspired Chervil Soup; Grilled Italian Caesar Salad; and Wiener Apfelstrudel, a traditional Austrian pastry served warm with vanilla sauce, will end the meal on a sweet note.
To that end, this batter has pulverized cashews and nutritional yeast for a cheesy flavor along with more traditional breadcrumbs and spices.
We pass our tomato sauce through it, we put my baked potatoes through it instead of a ricer for making gnocchi, we press fish stock through it to squeeze all the flavor out of every little bone, and we do something else with it that's not very traditional, actually: We slice the nicest parts of the fish loin and belly for our red snapper crudo, and then we push all the trim through the fine holes of the food mill to end up with a kind of fish tartare.
They're a little time consuming but the end result is worth the effort!These are best enjoyed right after they are fried to bite into that crisp pastry.You could also cheat by opting for Phyllo sheets if you wish to make the process easier and bake them instead of deep frying, but I went with the traditional method just the way they're sold on the streets in India!
Besides seeing all the nominated films, talking about Oscar politics with one of my best friends, and making statistically - based predictions, I have a traditional Oscar Night meal that always ends with Red Velvet Cake...... or at least it used to.
It started on a New Year's Day, with pomp, parades, bowl queens and quarterbacks in a traditional spectacle, and it ended hardly hours ago to the shush of skis across a hundred mountain slopes, the tranquillity of a year - end sunset seen from a thousand duck blinds and the last ice fisherman packing up his gear onthe frozen surface of Lake Minnetonka.
This is an incredibly difficult question to answer for a variety of reasons, most importantly because over the years our once vaunted «beautiful» style of play has become a shadow of it's former self, only to be replaced by a less than stellar «plug and play» mentality where players play out of position and adjustments / substitutions are rarely forthcoming before the 75th minute... if you look at our current players, very few would make sense in the traditional Wengerian system... at present, we don't have the personnel to move the ball quickly from deep - lying position, efficient one touch midfielders that can make the necessary through balls or the disciplined and pacey forwards to stretch defences into wide positions, without the aid of the backs coming up into the final 3rd, so that we can attack the defensive lanes in the same clinical fashion we did years ago... on this current squad, we have only 1 central defender on staf, Mustafi, who seems to have any prowess in the offensive zone or who can even pass two zones through so that we can advance play quickly out of our own end (I have seen some inklings that suggest Holding might have some offensive qualities but too early to tell)... unfortunately Mustafi has a tendency to get himself in trouble when he gets overly aggressive on the ball... from our backs out wide, we've seen pace from the likes of Bellerin and Gibbs and the spirited albeit offensively stunted play of Monreal, but none of these players possess the skill - set required in the offensive zone for the new Wenger scheme which requires deft touches, timely runs to the baseline and consistent crossing, especially when Giroud was playing and his ratio of scored goals per clear chances was relatively low (better last year though)... obviously I like Bellerin's future prospects, as you can't teach pace, but I do worry that he regressed last season, which was obvious to Wenger because there was no way he would have used Ox as the right side wing - back so often knowing that Barcelona could come calling in the off - season, if he thought otherwise... as for our midfielders, not a single one, minus the more confident Xhaka I watched played for the Swiss national team a couple years ago, who truly makes sense under the traditional Wenger model... Ramsey holds onto the ball too long, gives the ball away cheaply far too often and abandons his defensive responsibilities on a regular basis (doesn't score enough recently to justify): that being said, I've always thought he does possess a little something special, unfortunately he thinks so too... Xhaka is a little too slow to ever boss the midfield and he tends to telegraph his one true strength, his long ball play: although I must admit he did get a bit better during some points in the latter part of last season... it always made me wonder why whenever he played with Coq Wenger always seemed to play Francis in a more advanced role on the pitch... as for Coq, he is way too reckless at the wrong times and has exhibited little offensive prowess yet finds himself in and around the box far too often... let's face it Wenger was ready to throw him in the trash heap when injuries forced him to use Francis and then he had the nerve to act like this was all part of a bigger Wenger constructed plan... he like Ramsey, Xhaka and Elneny don't offer the skills necessary to satisfy the quick transitory nature of our old offensive scheme or the stout defensive mindset needed to protect the defensive zone so that our offensive players can remain aggressive in the final third... on the front end, we have Ozil, a player of immense skill but stunted by his physical demeanor that tends to offend, the fact that he's been played out of position far too many times since arriving and that the players in front of him, minus Sanchez, make little to no sense considering what he has to offer (especially Giroud); just think about the quick counter-attack offence in Real or the space and protection he receives in the German National team's midfield, where teams couldn't afford to focus too heavily on one individual... this player was a passing «specialist» long before he arrived in North London, so only an arrogant or ignorant individual would try to reinvent the wheel and / or not surround such a talent with the necessary components... in regards to Ox, Walcott and Welbeck, although they all possess serious talents I see them in large part as headless chickens who are on the injury table too much, lack the necessary first - touch and / or lack the finishing flair to warrant their inclusion in a regular starting eleven; I would say that, of the 3, Ox showed the most upside once we went to a back 3, but even he became a bit too consumed by his pending contract talks before the season ended and that concerned me a bit... if I had to choose one of those 3 players to stay on it would be Ox due to his potential as a plausible alternative to Bellerin in that wing - back position should we continue to use that formation... in Sanchez, we get one of the most committed skill players we've seen on this squad for some years but that could all change soon, if it hasn't already of course... strangely enough, even he doesn't make sense given the constructs of the original Wenger offensive model because he holds onto the ball too long and he will give the ball up a little too often in the offensive zone... a fact that is largely forgotten due to his infectious energy and the fact that the numbers he has achieved seem to justify the means... finally, and in many ways most crucially, Giroud, there is nothing about this team or the offensive system that Wenger has traditionally employed that would even suggest such a player would make sense as a starter... too slow, too inefficient and way too easily dispossessed... once again, I think he has some special skills and, at times, has showed some world - class qualities but he's lack of mobility is an albatross around the necks of our offence... so when you ask who would be our best starting 11, I don't have a clue because of the 5 or 6 players that truly deserve a place in this side, 1 just arrived, 3 aren't under contract beyond 2018 and the other was just sold to Juve... man, this is theraputic because following this team is like an addiction to heroin without the benefits
Some of the fanatic Napoli boosters in the end zone, the «Southboys,» with their smoke bombs and Confederate flags from the American Civil War, sing their traditional chant, «Maradona is better than Pelè.
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