Sentences with phrase «wrote about a couple»

The best way to achieve this is by keeping a journal and writing about a couple of specific topics, which we will cover below.
Last week I said I would write about a couple of nuclear energy ETFs.
The final lesson from Soros is quite similar to the lesson we wrote about a couple quarters ago in #NotDifferentThisTime on the wisdom of Sir John Templeton who said that investors would always ask him where is the best place to invest, and he would respond to them that this was exactly the wrong question and that they should rather be asking where is it the most miserable?
Although, as a side point, I do think it highlights that we are not consistent enough to grab one of the automatic promotion spots as I wrote about a couple of weeks ago.
Your marriage is yours to create and re-create (and next week I'll write about some couples who had marital contracts that I just discovered).
Written On The Wind — A great Douglas Sirk melodrama which I wrote about a couple weeks ago.
I also wrote about a couple of excellent 2014 films: Tsai Ming - liang's Journey to the West and Wes Anderson's The Grand Budapest Hotel.
My friend Alex Hernandez recently wrote about this in some depth, and my colleague Katherine Mackey and I have written about this a couple times before as well.
I hope to write about a couple of these soon.
Yes, I think I've written about this a couple of times.
And I'm rather amused to see Hot Tuna mentioned as a value trap — coincidentally, a stock so pathetic it inspired me to write about it a couple of times..!
Last week, we wrote about a couple of great offers for those who have the Starwood Preferred Guest ® Credit Card from American Express.
With the Game Developers Conference that I wrote about a couple of months ago now underway, new Brutal Legend media is starting to spill onto the internet.
They wrote about a couple of concerns with this concept: first, that all human behavior ought to have something to do with «becoming like the Absolute,» or maybe with accounting for one's position within it.
I've written about a couple of recent examples of this kind of fast - motion flow of misinformation (and often disinformation), including the release of a startling paper debunking global warming that was entirely fake and designed to fool right - wing bloggers and radio hosts.
Readers may be surprised to know that part of the answer may be found high in the atmosphere above the Arctic in connection with a phenomenon known as the stratospheric polar vortex, which I wrote about a couple years ago on this blog.
I want to write about a couple of other aspects of the story: the culpability of 270,000 Facebook users in disclosing the data of 50 million of their peers, and what this situation tells us about evergreen proposals to «open up the social graph» by making users» social media content portable.
Hi Hallie, Today, I was offered a position with the company that I worked for a few years ago... this is the position that I've been working on since October that I wrote you about a couple of times.
Tina of LuvemOrLeavem recently wrote about couples who choose to live together, and she lists some of the most common reasons that women cite for moving in together that left them regretting their decision.
Dr. Schnarch writes about couples in easy, non-technical language.

Not exact matches

The couple, who just celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary, isn't written about in the media very often.
The couple had 12 children, two of whom wrote a book about their family's life called «Cheaper by the Dozen.»
You can write a couple of words about what you do for a living, two truths and a lie, a few bullet points — it doesn't matter.
After continually hearing terms like «entrepreneur's widow» as well as stories about the overwhelming failure rates for entrepreneurial marriages, Harp chose to write her master's thesis on «Spousal Satisfaction In Entrepreneurial Couples
If you're blogging once or twice a week, brainstorm and jot down some topics to write about and insert them into a calendar that extends into the next couple of months.
When you speak for a minute or write a couple of sentences about the business, you should be able to explain the core concept and exactly why it's a valuable investment opportunity to a prospect.
My advice - based articles about how to clarify your calling, overcome self - doubt, self - promote with style and take immediate action toward making your dreams a reality generated a string of clients and within a couple of months I was earning money both writing and coaching.
A couple of weeks ago, Cunningham wrote a stunning review of the aforementioned film about Apple's famous founder.
Richard J. Reddick, associate professor of educational leadership and policy at the University of Texas, writes for Fortune that some people of color might be cynical about Starbucks» response to the crisis that was precipitated by a store manager calling the cops on two black men sitting at a table (after a mere couple of minutes of them not buying anything.)
A couple months later, in November, when the Burnaby Mountain standoff was at its peak and protesting residents were being arrested, Kinder Morgan again lobbied the provincial government about its plans for Trans Mountain and, you guessed it, wrote a cheque to the BC Liberals.
I'm so - so as a writer, and am currently finishing up my second book (just write as a hobby), and in the past made about 30 - 50 dollars an hour as a free lance writer but that was a couple of years back, it was only for about 10 - 20 hours a month, and the gig just dried up.
As I've written about recently, at Upfront Ventures we started talking a couple of years ago about wanting to fund stuff with more meaning.
I wrote a post about reinvested dividends a couple of days ago but your graphs are much clearer.
I wrote about DIGIT, a new way of squeezing out some extra cash a couple of weeks ago, here.
Um, the BIBLE talks about the world as being a sphere and it was written a couple thousand years ago when people were POSITIVE the world was flat.
Surely if a person showed up in Ethopia today and fed everyone with a couple loafs and fishes, at least one person would write about it.
So in addition to the Top 10 of the year, I wanted to share a couple more posts — these are the posts that I actually liked or feel represent my year of writing, even if no one else liked them or tweeted about them, even if they are an out - of - fashion style of blogging like story - telling or moment - capturing.
Not only has she written a couple of fantastic articles about The Hunger Games, she's written an entire book entitled The Hunger Games and the Gospel released this week by Patheos Press.
It's been a while since I've written here about Christianity, gender roles, and the whole egalitarian / complementarian divide, but a couple things prompted today's post.
Some of these criticisms I have written about over the past couple of years on this blog.
Your Auden quote resonates with how I feel about illusion... I hope you don't mind, But some musing I wrote a couple of days ago from an almost 30 year journey is about the cross and illusion...
Rory Stewart: This guy walked across Iran, Pakistan, India, Nepal, Afghanistan, and Iraq and lived to write a couple of books about it.
I've written about this important topic a couple times.
Keller should have stopped a couple of weeks early, before he wrote the disaster titled, «Asking Candidates Tougher Questions About Faith.»
But a couple of bona fide scholars — not professors teaching religious studies in universities but scholars nonetheless, and at least one of them with a Ph.D. in the field of New Testament — have taken this position and written about it.
After a journalist wrote about having a «marriage sabbatical», the Christian founder of the Marriage Foundation tells Premier there's no hard and fast rule but he advises long periods apart can be damaging and that couples should invest in each other.
When I get a chance I'll write a couple of posts — One about the homeless and Jesus (some dislike churches and Christians, others are Jesus followers, but most like Jesus), and one about observations the homeless make to us about the people who show up on their turf to «minister» to them (whose attitudes range from condescension, which is very common, to love, which is very uncommon).
Your statement about» the sword that attempts to separate the sheep from the goats, the wheat from the chaff, the true believer from the false» reminds me of something I wrote a couple months ago.
I wrote in this magazine just a couple of months ago about these «RSVP» moments, which proves that I either think that they are important, or I spend too much time in church gatherings (and need to get out more), or both.
A couple years ago I wrote about my visit to Augustine College, a nano - institution with paltry resources that offers a one - year program of Christian liberal arts for kids who want serious intellectual and spiritual formation before entering college.
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