Word: norms
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...show will be good (though it's easier to tell a real stinker), but Fox's set is at least more original-sounding than most other networks' (and they look much better than its horrible crop this season, "Wanda at Large" excepted). "A Minute with Stan Hooper" stars Norm MacDonald - as a New York TV personality who moves to small-town Wisconsin to produce a show and finds the locals are less simple than he expects. "Luis" stars character actor Luis Guzman ("Boogie Nights") as the owner of an East Harlem donut shop; prime-time could use a few more...
...farm in Vermont rather than in her hometown, Olympia, Wash., where she feared her estranged divorced parents would spoil the atmosphere. "If I got married where I grew up, people would have come just to glare at each other," Lowe says. With rehearsal dinner and postwedding brunch the new norm, brides and grooms today spend as long as four days with their guests, says Millie Martini Bratten, editor in chief of Bride's magazine. "People live such busy lives that to have a wedding where everyone flies in from across the country and arrives at 4 p.m., only to leave...
...God’s inerrant and infallible Word (which reveals God’s law and salvation through Jesus Christ), Lutherans are among the Protestants who believe in sola scriptura, that is, that the Bible is the only document of divine revelation and that it is the sole norm and basis of Christian doctrine, as opposed to Catholics who believe that God has revealed doctrine through Tradition as well. Because of sola scriptura, many hours of my youth were spent in discovery of doctrine in the Bible. Though some Lutheran doctrines, such as original sin or water baptism, are easily...
When offered information about your targets’ whereabouts, questions of reliability and motive arise. Ambushes are the norm during the game, and the revealing of turncoats always comes too late...
Naturally, these instances aren’t the norm. “In general, it’s a well-oiled machine,” says Julia E. Kobick ’05, IOP Forum Committee chair, about her own experiences with speakers. Still, the IOP does host a pretty influential and powerful clientele, so it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise that there are a few divas among their ranks. They’ve got to eat and drink...