Sentences with phrase «words we hear»

It's heavy, it's passionate, and it's a name that no matter where you go in the world, people know that word, so in the beginning when we were nobody and nobody knew who we were, people would go, «Oh, Kiss, I've heard of you,» because it's just a word you hear all the time.»
I think after reading it you'll agree that the CEO's temperament, a word we heard a bit too often in recent months, is part of the reason he has been successful in making Microsoft great again.
GRIFFETH: The word we heard in all three reports, cloud, the growing influence of that in the technology world for companies that are not known for.
It was the last word I heard from him for almost six months....
«Welcome home» will be the words we hear then.
I still remember the vulgar words I heard as I came up from the basement to the upstairs.
The few who speak out are ignored, or people do not know what to do with the words they hear.
The last word we hear from Isaac's lips is the name of Abraham, his father and ours.
At best they offer «crumbs to the beggars» (the wording I heard the head deacon of one church say in regards to this issue).
These words you hear are not my own; they belong to the Father who sent me.»
They were ready to recognize that the God whose word they heard in their history, must forever remain beyond man's comprehension.
He who sent me is present with me, and has not left me alone, for I always do what is acceptable to him... The word you hear is not mine; it is the word of the Father who sent me.»
In spite of the hieratic and ceremoniously rigid style of the work, is there not a great deal of life here — life in the people whose words we hear, and whose acts we witness, and life above all in the Buddha Sakyamuni and in the great disciples who have been transformed into archangels?
As I'll cover in more detail later, practically the first words I heard from my cardiologist here on Maui was that «AA.
The message of faith which comes in the word we hear opens by grace the eye of inner experience so that it may dare to understand itself and to accept the «sweet secret of its strangeness» as its true meaning.
In the following words we hear the ring of an imperious universalism which has been present in much religious history, and which has certainly had its parallels in some forms of Christianity:
The words we hear as sounds don't resemble the objects we see.
Justice is a word we hear invoked in countless situations.
His successor, Amaziah (c. 800 - 783), «killed ten thousand Edomites in the Valley of Salt» (II Kings 14:7) but, in an exchange of words heard in substance every day on elementary school playgrounds, provoked war with Israel that ended in Judah's disastrous defeat (14:8 - 14) Popular disaffection with the reigns both of Joash and Amaziah culminated in assassination.
The Word spoken is also the Word heard.
This is not to say, however, that belief can be purely personal, either: the Word heard is not one's own.
She knows that among the first words I heard in English were, «You dirty Jew, why don't you go back where you came from,» and that throughout my life in the U.S. I kept running into one version or another of that sentiment.
The critics might extol various consciousness - raising rappers, but the word on the street, the word I heard gaining ground in school - yard after school - yard, in rap after rap, alas, it would have to be Nigga.
The last words we hear from him are like the first (see 43:8 - 11 and 44:26 - 30).
Of Charles Gore it is recorded that almost the last words heard from his lips were «transcendent glory: «58 perhaps the theologian's unconscious mind turned to familiar topics, or perhaps the lover of God looked at last upon the face of Him in whom he had so long hoped and believed.
Heavy is the word I hear the most to describe gluten - free baked goods.
And if the words we heard from Palermo just a day or so ago about a deal getting done soon, then we could see Juventus having something other to celebrate later this week besides potentially making the Champions League final.
On that theme... the one word I heard expressed more than any other in that first half was not «shoot»... but «forward».
Or, you could take 15 minutes off of his curfew for every salty word you hear.
The more words she hears, the better she'll be able to talk.
The more words they hear, the more they'll become familiar with.
Or a preschooler may echo a group of words she hears often, like «Go bye - bye» or «All gone.»
If it happens that one of the first words you hear from your toddler is «Why?»
Her babbles increasingly mix vowels and consonants, trying to imitate actual words she hears you say.
«If only» are two words I hear most from parents,» Borba said.
It's not a word we hear much any more, but the concept is being welcomed back into the educational dictionary.
Even though your baby can't understand the real meaning behind the words he hears, he can pick up the rhythm and tone of the sentences and will respond to how the mother responds to whatever she reads.
This age is also the time of parroting, which means your child will mimic the words he hears.
«You may inadvertently reinforce teasing by over-reacting to the words you hear,» says Schenck.
Likewise, when people experience hypnosis, they often simply allow their bodies to relax and their minds to focus attention on the words they hear, and the various images they may represent in their minds.
The people they are describing, or insulting, Dee warns, are often «the lower working - class families — a lot of people who vote», and they are alienated by the words they hear from politicians.
Waukesha is not a word heard often in Albany, but the Cuomo administration is in the midst of a long - simmering battle over whether that Wisconsin city just west of Milwaukee should be able to divert water from Lake Michigan, setting a precedent over a compact designed to protect the quality and quantity of the world's largest freshwater supply.
Ashley Gilleland / AAAS BOSTON — Efforts to close the word gap — the vast difference in the number of words heard by children from...
BOSTON — Efforts to close the word gap — the vast difference in the number of words heard by children from low - income and higher - income homes — by working with the parents and caregivers of very young children have shown promising new results in the behavior of parents and children, according to three researchers at a Feb. 17 briefing at the 2017 AAAS Annual Meeting in Boston.
Listeners either pay attention to the items delivered in one ear while dismissing the words in the other (i.e., separation), or are required to repeat all words heard (i.e., integration).
They asked the participants to repeat the words they heard.
Because there's evidence that the words we hear and the words we recall or imagine trigger similar brain processes, the study, published online today in PLoS Biology, suggests scientists may one day be able to tune in to the words you're thinking — a potential boon for patients who are unable to speak due to Lou Gehrig's disease or other conditions.
Participants were then asked to identify whether the words they heard began with a «ba» or a «pa» sound.
To match their own vocalizations to the words they hear, they need a way to precisely adjust their tongue and vocal cords to mimic the sounds of those words.
You may be the first and only kind word they hear in their day, what an amazing gesture of love!
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