Results 21 to 40 of 511 for stemmed:stand
[...] My thoughts are that she’d be so terrified to find herself without a publisher that she’d stand for a lot more than what has happened, bad as that is. [...] I for one have to do or say something, or I’d spend my days thinking about what a fool and coward I was not to stand up for my rights. [...]
You could stand some more advertising, but high-fired promotional jobs are something else entirely, and would not suit your best interests.
Of course, probabilities always operate, and I am speaking now of the situation as it stands. [...]
One woman, another follower, for Ruburt is the leader of this group, pushes a landscape of yours across the floor ahead of her—preserving, you see, your art as well as Ruburt’s. Finally one of the women objects strenuously and decides to stand up and show herself. [...] That woman represents Ruburt’s decision to be done with the symptoms, to stand up, to walk.
(11:10.) There should be considerable improved functioning noticeable in Ruburt’s body—some considerable lack of habitual restraint in motion occurring, say, as affairs now stand, anywhere from now to a week or ten days.
[...] One can stand next to the elevator bank and look out at the parking lot for the emergency room at the back of the hospital. [...]
He receives new indications of his improvements each day, so it is vital that he remember that the improvements are leading him toward sitting up, standing, and walking. [...]
Now in the same way, I am telling you that objects are also symbols that stand for a reality whose meaning the objects, like the letters, transmit. [...]
(While telling me this, Jane abruptly remembered that during part of the delivery she seemed to be standing beside the long, floor-to-ceiling bookcase that divides our living room from her workroom. [...]
[...] It also stands for the separation of the self who perceives — and therefore judges and values — from the object which is perceived and evaluated. [...]
[...] Yet the serpent would always mystify and attract man, even though he must stand upon its head, symbolically speaking, and rise from its knowledge.
[...] It’s the little painting of a dream of my own, in which I stand on the close edge of a roof, looking down into a city street. [...]
An excellent dream, in which the paintings stand for paintings—but also show that the fruit of your other endeavors will do well in the marketplace—that the marketplace will reward you—and that also includes the insurance situation. [...]
You may suddenly strongly wish that you were standing by a beloved but distant, familiar seashore, for example. [...] The place that you had envisioned would then attract the form, and it would instantaneously stand there. [...]
[...] On the other hand, if the desire were still more intense, the energy core would be greater, and a portion of your own flow of consciousness would be imparted to the form, so that for a moment you in your room might suddenly smell the salt air, or in some other way perceive the environment in which this pseudoimage stands.
The name simply seemed to stand for all of man’s agonizing reach for greatness, and yet for the anguish that always seemed to separate himself. [...]
[...] His value to his company is appreciated by his superiors, and in the meeting which will take place, his stand as an individual is his main hope of success.
If he takes a stand as an individual, despite the pressure against him, he will get most of what he desires, and compromises will be worked out to his satisfaction. [...]
[...] But a firm stand on Philip’s part will result in compromises that they are not now considering, but that must be made to ensure his comparative happiness within the field.
[...] And yet we wanted a balance also, and so you stand as a man who intuitively recognized the value of inner information and the importance of the material, even though you were unacquainted with such ideas.
Nuclear power stands for power, plain and simple. [...] It stands in man’s dreams as belonging to God: the power of the universe (intently). [...]
[...] They act as symbols of inner reality, so it’s only natural that whether he’s aware of it or not, man perceives objects in such a fashion that they also stand for symbols that first originate in his dreams.
[...] Quite naturally, it seemed, I now realized that I was seeing a robed figure standing in a doorway, just beyond Jane’s right shoulder as she faced me seated in her rocker. The figure was perhaps three feet tall, standing facing me but with the light coming from the doorway behind so that the face was in shadow.
[...] I think perhaps we are coming very clear in this session, explaining in simple terms where all of us stand.
The automobile material still stands.
You saw the back of the girl’s head simply because the girl was standing with her back to you. [...]
The girl was merely a secretary, standing by the window and on her way to another office.
[...] You show a good deal of ability along this line, and possess an inner willingness to experiment, that will stand you in very good stead.