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1. They found that when they can't see the price tag, people prefer cheaper wine to pricier bottles.
2. Linda noted that although she hadn't won a single title or award, she had overcome an even bigger obstacle: her low perception of herself.
3. This supports the idea that humans have developed the ability to home in on targets that carry a perceived threat, especially when that target is associated with the physiological signs and feelings of fear.
4. After that, Jean practiced hard to be a good example to the beginners and her skills improved incredibly day after day.
5. The principle is the same as that of a movie screen, which has a rough surface in order to reflect the projected image equally to all parts of the audience.
6. We could see that this forecast of climate change might be the beginning of something important, although when it might begin to impact on policy thinking was hard to guess.
7. What if your brain latched on to this new routine and you continued to run outside at 3 a.m. every night in your underwear?
8. What if they brought the sample sale concept online?
9. Richard Dawkins and John Krebs argued that although in some circumstances it might be appropriate to describe animal signals as transferring information, in many other, perhaps most, cases there would be such a conflict of interest between signaller and receiver that it is more accurate to describe the signaller as attempting to 'manipulate' the receiver rather than just inform it.
10. Host: Well, I would guess comics since that's our topic for today.
11. Little wonder that when no thanks were forthcoming, some team members decided to bolt.
12. Research literature on the transfer of knowledge suggests that when people acquire knowledge in one context they can seldom apply this knowledge to situations in related contexts that look superficially different from the original context, but which are related by the major idea that could be applied to solve or analyze them.
13. In other words, a placebo has no known value, but it produces an effect on the body as though it did have healing properties.
14. The typical plot of the novel is the protagonist's quest for authority within, therefore, when that authority can no longer be discovered outside.
15. Erikson believes that when we reach the adult years, several physical, social, and psychological stimuli trigger a sense of generativity.
16. This suggests that if both self-protective and utilitarian AVs were allowed on the market, few people would be willing to ride in the latter — even though they would prefer others to do so.
17. Coordination can even be anticipatory, as when people alter their mood state prior to interacting with unfamiliar others.
18. Some people report that when they have to listen to very slow speakers, they very soon get headaches and cannot enjoy the contents of the speech.
19. And then slowly, one by one, as if someone were dropping pennies on the roof, came the raindrops.
20. The experimenters explain that when people are farther apart, they consider the factors in a more abstract way, focusing on the main issues rather than getting hung up on less important points.
21. The penguins are swimming in the water, but from a visitor's perspective they look as if they were flying in the sky!
22. One of the simplest ways of making a building look unusual is to break the normal rules of structure — or at least make it seem as if gravity is of no consequence.
23. At its root, the fear of missing out stems from the idea that this party, this concert, this show, this event will be the best thing ever and that if you don't go, you'll regret it forever.
24. In many cases the donation is so small ─ $10 or less ─ that if they stopped to think, they would realize that the cost of processing the donation is likely to exceed any benefit it brings to the charity.
25. In such a case, these people suffer from an inevitable social and mental trauma, leading to emotional stress and a feeling that all of a sudden they have been disassociated from what once was their identity.
26. No one goes tuna watching; we just want our supermarkets to ensure that when fishermen go hunting tuna, no 'nice' dolphins get caught in their nets!
27. Therefore, the task of the economist is the same as that of the natural scientist - to apply the processes of sustained and unbiased argument to the data of observation and to determine the general laws of all events.
28. Often, he would doze off himself, his head nodding, the stylus grasped in his hand as though he wanted to keep on working in his sleep.
29. He knows that any further investigation will harm Boo, and he doesn't want to do that because he knows that Boo has risked himself to save the children.
30. "I acted as if I didn't care, but silently I decided to change my body.
31. I watched the big, dark wave as if it were in slow motion until lightning flashed and woke me from my daze.
32. It is a fundamental mistake to imagine that when we see the non-value in a value or the untruth in a truth, the value or the truth ceases to exist.
33. The will stated that after the first 100 years, each city was permitted to withdraw 75% of the funds to use for public works, such as bridges, roads, and school buildings.
34. "Act As If You Already Achieved Your Dream If you want to maximize your chances of success, you must act as if you were already successful.
35. I realized that many of our prejudices are just based on things we don't know about, and that once we meet the real person, we come to understand the real story.
36. Whenever that's true, it's time to rethink what we're doing.
37. Making the elementary particles eternal puts the questions as to their properties in the realm of the absolute: They are like that because they always were and always will be.
38. Logically speaking, telling someone that the engaging in act X promotes outcome Y, or that not engaging in act X fails to promote outcome Y, provides the same objective information: Y (partly) depends on X・ However, the way in which that information is presented — in particular, whether the emphasis is placed on losses or gains — influences the decision-making process.
39. Some kinds of travel, such as that made by auto, bus, or train, incur both time and monetary costs; other trips, such as those made on foot, involve an expense primarily of time.
40. It's possible that as a result we have become less reliant on our other senses for gleaning information from our surroundings.
41. But what if you could take it a step further?
42. They all knew that if their social structure broke down, their problems would become more serious and did what they could do best.
43. The step from affirming equal moral worth to the conclusion that what is to be distributed should be distributed in equal pieces is never straightforward.
44. We anticipate the future as if we found it too slow in coming and we were trying to hurry it up.
45. Those who give small amounts to many charities are not so interested in whether what they are doing helps others ─ psychologists call them warm glow givers.
46. If that were so, why would people go to the trouble of writing poetry?
47. After that, they kept running as a team.
48. Dr・ Hoagland was curious enough to notice that whenever he left his wife's room for a short while, she complained that he had been gone for a long time.
49. These test audiences, usually recruited from a targeted age or social group, fill out questionnaires after the showing about what they liked and didn't like, what they thought about the story and the characters, after which the producers, writers and directors rewrite and edit to make it more audience-friendly.
50. As a result, they shy away from MST, rationalizing that because they are not coaching elite athletes, mental skills training is less important.
51. It is commonly thought that if you want people who do not like you to like you, you should do favors for them.
52. It seems as though an imprecise picture of the past is one reason for our inaccurate forecasts of the future.
53. But some tend to think that once they finish a certain level of education: "I'm done with school.
54. You may have had this experience if you have been reading a book and then suddenly become aware that although you were moving your eyes across the page and "reading" the words, you had no idea what you had just read.
55. I managed to overcome my urge to burst into tears, and expressed my joy and delight that after all these years this had happened and my thanks to my daughters and my family who had shared in the struggle so long.
56. The idea is that before the evil eye damages a thing or attacks a person, the nazar will attract the evil eye and absorb its damaging power or turn it back to the sender.
57. You may not realize that what you've spent the most time doing is sleeping.
58. In this circumstance, it is best to assume nothing and treat the problem as if you have never seen anything like it before.
59. That is, the amount of light reflected from one side is the same as that reflected from the other.
60. It was as if they were actually in the game.
61. He found that although the latter group came across as more extroverted, some of the fake extroverts were surprisingly convincing.
62. These days, looking at sociable robots and digitized friends, one might assume that what we want is to be always in touch and never alone, no matter who or what we are in touch with.
63. The rider then feels as if he is actually riding on a road of his choice, whether a street in a major city, or a calm mountain path, and all without leaving home.
64. People act as if their involvement will somehow affect the outcome of the toss.
65. From the outside, Casa Batllo looks as if it has been made from skulls and bones.
66. In many countries of the world, people from different groups that once hated, despised, and fought each other now live side by side and cooperate actively in a respectful, smoothly functioning system.
67. She was concerned that as a townie, she'd had little experience of the countryside, and none at all of swimming in rivers.
68. It was as if there were no other creatures in the world except Quan and me.
69. You must never assume that what people say or do in a particular moment is a statement of their permanent desires.
70. "Nothing happened after that," another Crow warrior said.
71. I feel as if I can't think on my own anymore.
72. After that trip, his style changed to reflect the realism of those painters.
73. If your kids have bad eating habits, ask yourself how that happened in the first place.
74. I reasoned that since I was going to be a journalist, I'd need a very special notebook in which to write.
75. Its preference was that if a company charged different prices to cash and credit customers, the credit price should be considered the "normal" (default) price and the cash price a discount ― rather than the alternative of making the cash price the usual price and charging a surcharge to credit card customers.
76. "If that were the case, then they would peck a lot just after they've been flying.
77. It looked as if there had been a fight.
78. Write about yourself as you might be writing about someone else, or as if you were telling a story that someone who didn't know you would read.
79. Imo, though, realized that if you threw a handful of wheat and sand into the ocean, the sand would sink and the wheat would float.
80. Students who remembered their own unethical behavior were more likely to act as if they felt unclean.
81. Research suggests that when we view ourselves as morally deficient in one part of our lives, we search for moral actions that will balance out the scale.
82. If that were the case, there would be no cultural differences in the world today.
83. On the other hand, the temperature of the air in the shade is usually the same as that in the Sun.
84. After that, she walked along the beach in a wedding dress every day.
85. Then I realized that if any of these things were wrong with my car, I wouldn't know it because I was busy driving.
86. Most jobs are still designed as if there were a homemaker to provide support for a working husband, and many institutional practices assume that all children live with two biological parents.
87. He realized that as a fighter pilot, he had never thought about who packed his parachute.
88. People vary a great deal both in the intensity of their response to art and in the form which that response takes.
89. A: Before I tried to walk on a rope suspended in the air, I laid a rope on the ground and practiced breathing, focusing my eyes, and shifting my weight as if I were on a real tightrope.
90. You never know where that employee who leaves will go next.
91. At night, the lights could be seen from outside the stable and took turns flashing, which appeared as if people were moving around with torches.
92. It is sometimes said, these days, that while "global warming" is a threat to most peoples and societies on this planet, there will be winners as well as losers.
93. If a patient's steps make loud noises, as if walking in wooden shoes, it will wake up the caregiver.
94. As the brain evolved, people who saw distances to goals as shorter might have gone after what they wanted more often.
95. This means that after you put in the study time needed to learn the material, you have to put in the relaxation time needed to prepare your mind to operate under pressure.
96. Yet, what if we set the bottom line only at the point where a child does harm?
97. Anne sits immobile on the sofa and stares ahead as if hypnotized by them.
98. Too many companies advertise their new products as if their competitors did not exist.
99. Hypothesis: What if some worms can eat plastic?
100. "She felt as though the thunderstorm was a present.
101. What is interesting to notice is that when we look more carefully to these key selling features, they look strangely like values that a bus or train operator is promoting.
102. Is that because this can't be trained?
103. Remember that when it comes to technical knowledge, writers and readers are hardly equal.
104. The thing is that when the amount of options exceeds a certain level, our decision making will start to suffer.
105. The problem of plastic pollution is becoming as serious as that of air pollution.
106. “Breaden, not today!” He knew what that meant.
107. In a nutshell, it says that since travel times increase with traffic volumes, an additional car on the road slows down all other cars, increasing time costs for all the occupants of all the cars.
108. What this demonstrates is that it's equally important to the success of the exercise that the person you're throwing to catches the ball as that you are able to catch the ball.
109. The soldier immediately distributed them to his comrades, saying that he had no occasion for money; and requested that if what he had done merited any compensation, he might be made an officer.
110. What if a shot given in the arm didn't hurt?
111. She explained that when she was a young mother, the only roasting pan she'd had was too short for a standard roast, so she had to cut off the end to fit it into the pan.
112. Act As If You Already Achieved Your Dream If you want to maximize your chances of success, you must act as if you were already successful.
113. The outermost circle is known as the performance zone ― because once we have mastered the new learning and mustered the courage to experiment with all the new knowledge, we will really start to perform differently from before.
114. Good feelings and positive events, on the one hand, can be placed in a context that makes them seem as if we deserved them and as if they help define who we are.
115. After that, one expert said it was worth $40 million.
116. She had the good fortune to have enlightened parents who considered the education of a daughter as important as that of a son.
117. My life changed so much after that.
118. Suppose you care very little about your own athletic skills, but when your friend scores the winning goal during a critical soccer match, you beam with pride, experience a boost to your self-esteem, and take delight in her victory celebrations as if, by association, it were your victory too.
119. Eventually, she turns away from her mother's spoonfuls, arches her back, turns around in her high chair, and vocalizes as if she is about to cry.
120. "We don't usually think that what we see, hear, and read is a series of narratives and images selected for particular reasons and grounded in the social worlds and interests of those producing the event, controlling the images, and delivering the commentary.
121. I also felt as if I could dribble through any tackle.
122. What if those same two words could change the world?
123. Medusa was a Gorgon who looked so terrible with snakes around her head, that if you looked at her directly you would turn into stone.
124. The number of both total medals and gold medals of the United States wasn't more than twice as high as that of Switzerland.
125. It can seem strange, at least at first, to stop praising; it can feel as though you're being chilly or withholding something.
126. They discovered that if you say "What a very clever girl you are" to the child showing you an A, you may cause her more harm than good.
127. They are interested in hearing about you — your academic plans, activities, and career goals, as well as what this scholarship means to you.
128. My advice is that if you want to do some serious thinking, then you'd better disconnect the Internet, phone, and television set and try spending twenty-four hours in absolute solitude.
129. Within the small corner of the media world in which that one TV show resides, you are.
130. For example, if someone seemed very nice to you early in the interaction, but then began to act like a fool, would you be more attracted to that person than if that person were a fool from the start?
131. However, my research has also shown that when focused and engaged more in strategic, abstract thinking, it becomes easier to remember the details.
132. It was much better than burning ropes for sure, but more importantly, it taught the students that once time was gone, it could never be recovered.
133. Right after that moment, not only Brielle's heart rate but also her body temperature came back to normal.
134. My husband remarked that if I didn't do something soon, I would be chased around for the rest of my days by a 15-pound woodchuck begging for milk.
135. They think that if the coin came up heads the last time, it is more likely to come up tails this time.
136. So when a salesperson tells you that, for example, extracts made from the roots of echinacea help prevent colds, ask if that statement has been scientifically tested — and if so, how, when, and by whom and how valid and reliable the test results are — before you decide to try this herbal remedy.
137. However, what if the casual observation leads to false assumptions, or misinterpretation gets in the way?
138. They sat in a movie theater, but felt as if they were part of the game, thanks to the virtual reality gear they wore.
139. To this day, many audience members and critics maintain that if you did not experience either of these men in the theatre, you did not experience their magic.
140. While that movie did have a pretty big budget, my point is that it did not need to have one in order to succeed.
141. You'd think that whenever more than one person makes a decision, they'd draw on collective wisdom.
142. Nevertheless, marketing and merchandising programs commonly treat these customers as if they are much older.
143. What if they had defined themselves as being in the mass transportation business?
144. As if that was not coincidence enough, more was to follow.
145. We rush through our childhood, red lights, and a courtship as if channel surfing.
146. In a complex, intellectually demanding and high-pressure task such as that of air traffic controllers, for example, having chronically high anxiety is an almost sure predictor that a person will eventually fail in training or in the field.
147. His wife, Nancy Stokes Milan, told the New York Opera Newsletter that when she and her husband had dinner with a famous voice coach, they played him a recording Sherrill had made when he was in college.
148. This means that if you lose sleep working late during the week, you should make up for the time you lost by sleeping longer on the weekend.
149. I felt as if I could run all day without getting tired.
150. Before that time, sailors depended on instruments that calculated the position of the sun or stars to tell them their latitude.
151. This lets us go through their experiences as if the experiences were ours.
152. After that, the immune system remembers the molecular equipment that it developed for that particular battle, and any following infection by the same kind of parasite is beaten off so quickly that we don't notice it.
153. The edge of the canvas cut off the scene in an arbitrary way, as if snapped with a camera.
154. Steffie claimed that she used only Spanish with her grandmother, because when her mother spoke to her in Spanish, she usually answered in English.
155. Athletes often report that when they are doing well in their sport the size of the target looks incredibly large.
156. In many ways, I've modeled my life after that of my grandpa.
157. The reality is that although you are free to choose, you can't choose the consequences of your choices.
158. He repeated the experiment a few more times, and found that when her temperature reached 39_5 degrees Celsius, she counted one minute in just 37 seconds.
159. It has been said that eye movements are windows into the mind, because where people look reveals what environmental information they are attending to.
160. But new research suggests that how we see the world depends on what we want from it.
161. It looked as if white paint had been spilled everywhere.
162. Then, act as if you were this future self.
163. Sarah gave me a look I've never seen before, as if she felt safer around me.
164. It was as if the old man worked through the break time just as he did.
165. Standing by the river and looking toward the city made me feel as if I were standing on the banks of the Han River.
166. After that, William became famous and had a chance to study in high school again.
167. Another consistent research finding is that when a learning activity is undertaken explicitly to attain some extrinsic reward, people respond by seeking the least demanding way of ensuring the reward.
168. The end of the universe is probably so old that if we had that telescope, we might be able to see the beginning.
169. If after watching a stand-up comedian a member of the audience stated 'that was really funny', it would suggest that the person thought the comedian was good, which contains a suggestion of recommendation.
170. Notice that we specifically avoid saying, "The subject is what a poem's about" — because that implies that what a poem says is all there is to a poem.
171. For example, it is documented that if people are asked to bet on whether a coin toss is heads or tails, most bet larger amounts if the coin is yet to be tossed.
172. Other studies have shown that after stressful situations, people recover faster in natural environments than in man-made ones.
173. It is essential that the observation room remain dark, because if a lamp were turned on, some of that light would pass through into the interrogation room as well.
174. Recently, however, some researchers found that how people are praised is very important.
175. As part of a research project, a group of undergraduate students watched a film, after which they were asked to describe it as fully as possible to other students.
176. Naturally, the importance of brand marketing strategy to enhance brand loyalty has to be emphasized and the Internet was chosen as the communication channel for that because of the large Internet penetration among young Australians.
177. Many people find that when they are angry, they go into a state where they want to exercise or clean.
178. Rather incredibly, one archaeologist employed by a treasure hunting firm said that as long as archaeologists are given six months to study shipwrecked artifacts before they are sold, no historical knowledge is lost!
179. Doing things quickly actually ends up slowing you down, such as when you rush out of your house only to realize you forgot your keys, phone, or wallet on the kitchen table.
180. Coaches must understand that when they make a strategy decision, it is a good or bad decision at the time it is made based on the players' abilities, the situation, and the percentages, not on whether the play was successful or unsuccessful!
181. They defied their perception of the song to produce a transcription, for example, that started and finished on middle C (rather than F) because they believed that if "Happy Birthday" started on C, then it must be in C major and should therefore end on C. As these students got older, they relied more on what they knew theoretically about music rather than what they heard and knew perceptually, with the result that they made surprisingly inaccurate transcriptions of familiar melodies.
182. He felt as if wild and powerful lines appeared in front of him.
183. On his march through Asia Minor, Alexander the Great fell dangerously ill/ His physicians were afraid to treat him because if they didn't succeed, the army would blame them.
184. For example, it can be time-consuming and the researcher would still need to consider exactly how the subgroups that make up the sample are selected: eg, what if those who are selected refuse to participate —how might this affect the representativeness of the sample?
185. They say that while studying at home, they start to check new messages posted on their blogs, but end up going through other people's blogs, photos, comments, etc.
186. Research has shown that when people who feel helpless fail to take control, they experience negative emotional states such as anxiety and depression.
187. It permits the guilty to avoid taking responsibility for their deeds, as when an employee is caught embezzling and he justifies it by saying he is very badly underpaid.
188. In other situations, permanency slips between our fingers, even challenging our reality testing about whether something existed at all, as when an email that we seem to remember receiving mysteriously disappears from our inbox.
189. As time went by, he noticed that even though he worked through his break time and hardly took a rest, the old woodcutter was cutting down the same amount of trees as him― and sometimes chopped down even more.
190. That's because after death, the human body dehydrates, causing the skin to shrink, or become smaller.
191. The general rule seems to be that if one is doing something new or for the first time, then being observed while doing it decreases performance.
192. The system's methods remain evident so that even if Tom were tempted to trust it, the silence and secrecy promotes distrust, just as top-down business decisions made without collaboration are distrusted.
193. Furthermore, if a cashier recommends something, you may feel as if you "needed" it all along.
194. After that massive drain, suppose we then take the battery to a service station and say, "I'd like this batter charged in ten minutes.
195. As a result, we are still guessing at what early tools were used for as well as what early art forms might have meant for the people who produced them, even when such drawings, often animals, are very recognizable.
196. One good way to remember to focus on form as well as content is to approach every paper as if you were trying to win a Pulitzer Prize for explanatory reporting.
197. They had changed her from her silk christening gown into a white dress with yellow flowers embroidered around her neck, as if she were a bride who'd slipped into her going-away dress at the end of the reception.
198. When you imagine your goals as though they've already been completed, the feeling of success and the vivid images send powerful messages to your brain.
199. Food unites as well as distinguishes eaters because what and how one eats forms much of one's emotional tie to a group identity, be it a nation or an ethnicity.
200. It is important to note that flycatchers go to the aid of another bird in danger only if that bird has helped other birds in the past.
201. Further research showed that if children drink two cups of milk a day, they will have good levels of vitamin D and iron.
202. But even this extreme of a collector who prefers art to people shows the importance of the social role of collecting, since Gulbenkian simply treated artworks as if they were people.
203. But when you see one of his films, you may wonder how that could be.
204. After that, we're going to take a close look at the food we buy.
205. The light transmitted in one direction is the same as that transmitted in the opposite direction.
206. In fact, research shows that if you walk after a meal, you may burn 15 percent more calories than if you walk the same time, distance, and intensity on an empty stomach.
207. There are efforts being made to determine what chemical stimuli are being detected by bacteria to make them engage in a coordinated release of their chemicals, as well as what genes on a bacteria are being activated that cause them to behave as they do.
208. Most seemingly impossible obstacles can be overcome by seeing possibilities, focusing on what is within your control, taking the first step, and then focusing on the next step and the next step after that.
209. A week after that came a rather poignant note from the saleswoman and her manager saying the other pair was also unavailable.
210. And what if two routes barely differ, perhaps by just a minute out of an hour's journey?
211. "Believe and act as if it were impossible to fail."
212. The share of Price Comparison apps in December 2011 was the same as that in December 2012.
213. Sometimes it looks as though it is on fire, especially when it is shining through the clouds.
214. LASID'S WIFE: It's been a while since I tasted an olive.
215. After that, they never saw each other again.
216. If a person believes that a powerful drug has been administered, he/she will experience the effects of the drug, even if what was administered was merely a sugar pill.
217. Since human influence was contradictory to the wilderness ethic, the management ideal was to isolate conservation areas, keeping disturbance to a minimum, on the grounds that if left alone, nature's balance would prevail.
218. Placing honey on slips of paper of different shades, he found that the insects which visited them seemed to have a marked preference for blue, after which came white, yellow, red, green and orange.
219. "Believe and act as if it were impossible to fail.
220. "After that, they kept running as a team.
221. I did that because leftover food pollutes the environment.
222. After that, she had become more confident and active.
223. The absence of curriculum materials about contemporary art reflects the attitude that the only valuable art is that which has "withstood the test of time."
224. That sense of being alone with the person to whom you are writing―as though you were the only two people in the world―often blocks out what you know to be true.
225. In his famous work Three Musicians, he used abstract forms to shape the players in such an unexpected way that when you first see this artwork, you assume that nothing makes sense.
226. A bias occurs when what the scientist expects changes how the results are viewed.
227. That day was unusually foggy as if something mysterious were ahead.
228. After that, she worked for a government office in Washington D.C., where she was fired just because she was a woman.
229. In turn it is likely that as they tell each other their already edited stories, there is a second process of editing whereby what they both hear from each other is again interpreted within their respective family of origin's construct systems.
230. When that filter mistakenly screens out something essential, then even seasoned masters can make mistakes.
231. The engineers thought that if it worked for birds, why not for airplanes?
232. Crystal also points out that although trillions of text messages are sent worldwide each year, this number pales in comparison to the number of conventional, grammatically correct communications we are exposed to each year.
233. Despite my worries, the camel walked faithfully around the pyramids as if it knew it had to guard them.
234. This means that if you invest any amount of money, it will continuously grow at an ever-accelerating rate.
235. Doctors at Mount Sinai Hospital said that if Claude was strong enough, he would be put on a heart transplant waiting list.
236. Full of confidence, he even suggested that if she couldn’t answer his question, she’d pay $5, but if he couldn’t answer hers, he’d pay $500.
237. The number of researchers per 1,000 people in the EAP in 2007 was twice as large as that in 1999.
238. The image feels real, but we cannot explain exactly what we see, just as if it were a dream.
239. But as soon as he puts skis on his feet, it is as though he had to learn to walk all over again.
240. What if my words don't make sense?
241. It is tempting to accept the proposition that because they are "old," the old media have been developed by some point in time and do not change thereafter.
242. Black Wings nodded and said, "And I've learned that when you do win a game, you should be respectful to others and not brag about how good you are."
243. The Monte Carlo Fallacy (or Gambler's Fallacy) is the mistaken belief that if something happens more frequently than normal during some period, then it will happen [less / more] frequently in the future, presumably as a means of balancing nature.
244. It is commonly known that when people's hearts stop and they breathe their last, they are dead.
245. It felt nice and cool, not as freezing as when she had first stepped into it.
246. What if I don't do a good job?
247. So, the same website as that of the Australian market wasn't direct enough for Danish girls and young women.
248. The percentage of the respondents aged 18 to 29 who read up to 3 books per year was the same as that of the respondents aged 30 to 59 in the same category.
249. That's why if you have a truly new product, it's often better to say what the product is not, rather than what it is.
250. Carnegie told her that if he wrote them he would get an immediate response.
251. Everything was black as if I were in a coal mine.
252. One line of research suggests that how often you go over material is less critical than the depth of processing that you engage in.
253. What if they think I'm stupid?
254. I walked up to the stage and took my place behind the microphone, grabbing both sides of the podium as though I was on a sinking ship and hanging on for dear life.
255. Valuing diverse thought is harder than you would think, because we all have hidden biases and perspectives that if not understood can shut down creativity in others.
256. Marie Curie is treated as if she worked alone to discover radioactivity and Newton as if he discovered the laws of motion by himself.
257. A designer thought that if he could create fonts that have tiny holes in them, he might be able to make more efficient use of the amount of ink used.
258. In order to bring our ideas or dreams to life, we have to expect fear and uncertainty, welcome it in, and know that once we face it, it no longer has a hold on us.
259. This level of development is evident when a 2-year- old offers a hug to another child who is crying, as if to say, "I feel better when mom hugs me so I will hug you."
260. The fact that people are different and possess different talents means that when you work as a team, together you can achieve more than anyone of you could do alone.
261. "It's as if they are afraid to do anything that might make them fail and lose your high appraisal.
262. By mentally taking oneself through that circumstance and imagining what one would do in that situation, the body and mind are more likely to respond favorably, rather than to freeze, if that situation were to ever occur.
263. But what if I told you that exercise isn't only good for your body?
264. When people first saw the painting and questioned this statement, Magritte would tell them that if it were a pipe, they should try to fill it with tobacco.
265. What if they don't like me?
266. After that experience, Plumb would ask the audiences of his lectures, "Who's packing your parachute?
267. One might assume that what we want is plenty of weak ties, the informal networks that underpin online acquaintanceship.
268. They have no memories about what the aged once were and greet them as if they were children.
269. In fact, O'Toole says that when you are dealing with a criminal, even your feelings may fail you.
270. What these parents don't realize, however, is that while in the short term they may be making the lives of their children more pleasant, in the long term they may be preventing their children from acquiring self-confidence, mental strength, and important interpersonal skills.
271. What if we make use of the part of the courtyard near the terrace" one builder suggested.
272. Even though media coverage of sports is carefully edited and represented in total entertainment packages, most of us believe that when we see a sport event on television, we are seeing it "the way it is.
273. It was cold up on the mountain, but it was as if you could see to the end of the world and beyond.
274. When that civilization collapsed in the 9th and 10th centuries AD, the people did not disappear.
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