Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

228 Sentences With "more afraid"

How to use more afraid in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "more afraid" and check conjugation/comparative form for "more afraid". Mastering all the usages of "more afraid" from sentence examples published by news publications.

According to her, people were more afraid of priests than police.
I was more afraid of living with myself after this experience.
And anyway, are people really more afraid than after Sept. 11?
They seem to get smaller and more afraid, and never recover.
They were more afraid than me and that broke my heart.
And now, after this attack, Muslims are a little more afraid.
"We started off being a lot more afraid of them," says Wong.
But I was more afraid living unhappy, so I faced that fear.
I'm even more afraid that my father could ever know this story.
So I find myself now being more afraid of taking these steps.
Why is the world not more afraid of a no-deal Brexit?
Honestly, I was more afraid of imprisonment than execution by drug lord.
"I've never been more afraid of writing a book," she confesses (wisely).
Some of them may have serious consequences for abortion access in the state — causing clinics to close, increasing costs or red tape, making doctors more afraid to do their jobs or women more afraid to seek their services.
"I was more afraid with him because he had been married," says Kufrin.
There is also no figure skater I'm more afraid of than Evgenia Medvedeva.
They're just more afraid of Trump's popularity than they are of the president.
"We were more afraid that someone was going to hurt us," Zarifeh said.
Probably they're more afraid of you and [me], than we are of them.
"I am much more afraid of my wife," he said, "than Mayon erupting."
"The distrust makes governments fragile and politicians more afraid of voters," he said.
Now I see that first I have to help her be more afraid.
If she knew as much as the reader, she'd be even more afraid.
As time goes on, I grow more and more afraid that won't happen.
Is he more afraid of what Robert Mueller, the special counsel, will find, or is he really more afraid of what Russia already has on him after doing business with that country and after the Russian hacking of the presidential campaign?
The kids should be much more afraid of these keys and of Well Lady.
But look, white supremacists are more afraid of us than we are of them.
She is more afraid now, she says, than she was immediately after the earthquake.
Higher pitches sound happier, lower ones sound sadder, and trembly voices are more afraid.
Would you be more afraid of 4-inch diameter hail or grapefruit-size hail?
They&aposre more conservative with their money, too, and more afraid of losing it.
And as afraid as I was, I then felt more afraid it wouldn&apost publish.
People are more afraid of losing an election than they are losing their constitutional republic.
But bad economic times make people more afraid to change jobs and take economic risks.
"I used to be a lot more afraid of going off script," she told me.
Those people are generally not willing to ... They were much more afraid and more embarrassed.
But I was actually more afraid that she'd say, 'Yes, I'll do it for you.
And rather than getting more comfortable with the futuristic technology, people are becoming more afraid.
He was much more afraid of the uniformed soldiers than he was of Boko Haram.
But he also understands why his peers may be more afraid than other age groups.
Trump's executive order, she says, will make undocumented immigrants who are already scared even more afraid.
"If anything, research shows we should be more afraid of not eating enough produce," Armul said.
"If anything, research shows we should be more afraid of not eating enough produce," Armul says.
By then, Merritt said investigators were desperate to calm a community growing more afraid every day.
I am much more afraid of what he says and the poisonous messages he will send.
In some cases, VCs should be more afraid of investing than they are of missing out.
It was a requirement from an employer more afraid of missed revenues than of spreading viruses.
The older I get, the more afraid I am of using the power of storytelling badly.
Misunderstood tragedies -- like famine, plague and infant mortality -- made people even more afraid of the unknown.
The thugs who mock our laws are the ones who are more afraid during these days.
Even though violence existed at parties, I think I felt more afraid out on the street.
Now we are more afraid than ever as we know life can be over in a second.
I clearly forgot markets are more afraid of a rate hike Stateside than a slowing US. Fool!
We should be a lot more afraid of the killers than we should be of permit holders.
We should, by all accounts, be much, much more afraid of them than, say, snakes or spiders.
My son is so much more afraid than your son, they boast to their friends and neighbors.
I'm more afraid that my side of the political fence is the slacker end of the fence.
The trip was dangerous, but I was more afraid of what might happen to us if we stayed.
I&aposd be more afraid they&aposd never get on the rails, not that it would go off.
Mitchell said that strategy works because companies are more afraid of censoring voices than keeping their users safe.
But when asked whether she was more afraid to die or be deported, she answered directly, in English.
That makes people really uncomfortable just because there's nothing men are more afraid of than a crying woman.
It appears as though police are more afraid, and feel much more threatened and uneasy around black men.
They're more afraid of media companies' armies of lawyers than of you and me claiming our human rights.
"'The rats are more afraid of you than you are of them,' they told us," Ms. Lehmann said.
I was just more afraid of the situation in general and seeing how people were shaken by it.
VICE: Do people get more afraid of death as they get older, or is it more personality-driven?
"I am more afraid of forgetting my parents' stories than I am of forgetting my own," Rosner writes.
Pew finds that the angrier and more afraid you are, the likelier you are to actually donate or volunteer.
Is it the campaign against whistleblowers during Obama's administration that's made us more and more afraid to speak out?
I mean, it's pretty obvious that if the It clown turned into dinosaurs, we would all be more afraid.
And yet, somehow, most Americans are able to sleep at night -- and are more afraid of Iran than Russia.
In many cases, the mules are more afraid of being caught with the drugs than they are of dying.
On Wednesday, some predicted Republicans will be even more afraid to go after Trump after what happened to Sanford.
So he seems to be more afraid of Donald Trump than he is (concerned) about doing the right thing.
"With the arrival of all the tourists, I'm much more afraid of the rise in street crime than terrorism."
"I'm more afraid of Hillary Clinton's war record and hawkishness than I am of building a wall," she added.
I'm more afraid to take off my clothes in real life than I am in front of a camera.
If you keep your feelings down and they explode, it's only going to make you more afraid of them.
This will change only when politicians are more afraid of voters than of the N.R.A. ☐ Opinion OpinionNicholas Kristof
Instead, "it speaks more to whether [gun owners] should be more afraid of other people's guns," Yamane told me.
Then the Californian's mother had a worrisome fall, and the Californian became even more afraid of leaving her alone.
When I was growing up, she made me more afraid of being a boring child than a naughty child.
But there's one futuristic tech that Americans are getting more and more afraid of with each passing year: Driverless vehicles.
Jagr, who is 43, joked that he was more afraid of Scott than the up-tempo 3-on-3 format.
Unlike me, he was more afraid of people than of lightning; my mind was on the storm at our heels.
"I told them that, regrettably, I'm more afraid of the authorities than I am of the drug traffickers," Rangel said.
I'm more afraid of running out of inspiration or ideas and not being able to create anything that entertains people.
I would've thought I'd be more afraid of being 40, but this has honestly been [...] Look, I like this time.
"If Americans and others are more afraid of terrorism, they're going to vote in a certain way," Mr. Kurzman said.
He regularly browbeat his opponents into passing his agenda, because they were more afraid of an election than he was.
I was even more afraid to tell them that I went to therapy, got diagnosed, and have been getting help.
I'm more afraid of the people around him than I am of him Goldstein: The question is what we can do.
What I'm more afraid of is Amazon having such a detailed voiceprint of everyone who has ever used an Alexa device.
They wake up in each other's arms the next morning, with poor Blake now even more afraid of possibly losing her.
Some people will say that rats are harmless, even that rats are more afraid of you than you are of them.
I wonder if, at this point, airplane passengers are more afraid of turbulence or being assaulted by an airport/airline employee.
I felt ashamed that I had to lie, but more afraid of what would happen if anyone ever found me out.
The more we have, the more obligated we are to guard it and the more afraid we are to lose it.
Every 13-year-old has the right to be more afraid of spiders or mummies than of their freaking science teacher.
Some fear public speaking to such a high degree that they claim to be more afraid of it than death itself.
"I began to feel more afraid of the pain and screams that they were experiencing than the death itself," Mr. Park said.
As the theory goes, the more votes Dr. Stein gets, the more afraid the Democratic establishment will be to abandon the left.
What it does do is make us more afraid and more willing to look for authoritarian figures to make us feel secure.
And, the closer we get to the election, the more afraid, I suspect, Democratic leadership would be to opening an impeachment hearing.
The result, as political scientist Seth Masket writes, is that Republicans are more afraid of their primary voters than general election voters.
" Mr. Frank said the race boiled down to this question: "Is the electorate more afraid of government than they are of inequality?
And he noticed that after the provisions were put into effect, people seemed more afraid of Stella than they had been before.
You see it throughout history: The rich get more afraid of the mob, and the richer they get, the greater the inequality.
Deliveroo responded saying she could "most certainly request this" but it's possible the driver "may be more afraid of spiders" than she is.
I often see pundits — Harris included — who seem far more afraid of "PC culture" than the problems PC culture is trying to address.
Chris Rock, an independent security researcher, is pissed that the Director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, is more afraid of ISIS than hackers.
Netflix said in January that it's more afraid of Fortnite taking viewers away than streaming video competitors like YouTube and Disney, for example.
Taken together, the two visions ask a basic question about humans and technology: Are we more afraid of our creations — or of ourselves?
I am more afraid of not doing the best thing we can than I am of breaking the thing that we currently have.
CNBC's Jim Cramer believes Wall Street should be much more afraid of Bernie Sanders in the White House of than of Elizabeth Warren.
An earlier survey found 60% of male supervisors felt more afraid to have one-on-one meetings with female employees after the movement.
Legislative polarization is at such a point today that members of Congress are generally more afraid of primary challenges than general election contests.
As a result of this blind faith, we seem more afraid of Facebook hiring biased human editors than of Facebook's greedy algorithm destroying democracy.
Of course, it only makes sense if you're a Republican lawmaker who's more afraid of the backlash from cutting a popular program or two.
"We are more afraid of this than we are of Zika," Liza Samuel, South Beach resident and mother of three, told the Miami-Herald.
So, Michael Cohen isn't telling prosecutors about his father-in-law's crimes because he is more afraid of the Mafia than of Donald Trump.
"Politicians are risk-averse in the best of times, in this political climate many are more afraid of Donald Trump than coronavirus," Gonsalves tweeted.
Those who are more familiar with sophisticated robotics are more afraid of losing their jobs than those who are less familiar, the report says.
But at the pace we are going, we do know that the closer Mueller gets to the truth, the more afraid the president acts.
Corporate executives are more afraid of what Amazon will do to their business than Donald Trump, according to a recent Bloomberg survey of earnings calls.
Certainly people are more careful in the ways that they speak [about fatness], because they're now a little bit more afraid of getting yelled at.
But up until now, at least, the Republican Party still appears to be more afraid of him — and his voters — than he is of them.
One of the most common factors, he says, is that we are typically more afraid of what we consider to be outside of our control.
Coyotes, like many wild animals, are more afraid of humans than we are of them, and are not likely to attack unless they feel threatened.
As Smith imagines it, he was more afraid of putting himself at the mercy of a homophobic world than he was of a known killer.
I couldn't decide if I was more afraid of death or of the general unknown of what waited for us once we crossed the border.
"The Justice Department is threatening to use vague, overbroad, and flawed coercive powers that will make people more afraid to seek care," Hina Shamsi said.
It can be a fine line between stories that give our fears a necessary stage and stories that deepen them — that make us more afraid.
If they want to keep the voters who are more afraid of climate change than they are of undocumented immigrants, they can't forget Ocasio-Cortez's.
Yet it's norovirus that is, far and away, the most common cause of food poisoning in the US. So why aren't Americans more afraid of it?
I am more afraid now that I know everything that they had on me Rose [McGowan], Rosanna [Arquette], Annabella [Sciorra], all the women he had hurt.
Although Uber's taking care of the bill, the drivers are taking time off for the next several weeks, because they're more afraid of losing their licences.
But there's one thing he is more afraid of than screwing up his enormous business: missing out on the opportunity he has to change the world.
"At times, women are more afraid to identify themselves as ambitious because of the negative connotations associated with being an ambitious woman," Keys told Business Insider.
But people also seemed more afraid to speak to a journalist than before, and mingled with the oppressiveness, there was an aggrieved nationalism in the air.
But officials are acting as if the numbers are high, which suggests they're more afraid of what is coming than what has already happened so far.
We are more afraid of being in a plane crash than a car accident driving to work, even though the latter is much more likely to happen.
" He added, "S&P now down on the year and people are more afraid to be long today than they were when market was 26.7 percent higher.
" She explains, "With Alena, he was a little bit more afraid in the beginning because it was something totally new, and now it's like they're best buddies.
The researchers did some personality measures of the people they surveyed, and found that those who want to remain ignorant tend to be more afraid of risk.
Deep down people who've done a chunk of time are more afraid of what they're gonna do, in the sense of not being ready for it mentally.
He's now living under the assumed name John Carlisle but seems less determined to expose Underwood's secrets and more afraid that the president may retaliate against him.
But anyone telling this kind of story now might be supplying rhetorical ammo to people who dream of making America smaller, meaner, more homogeneous and more afraid.
He was interested in making Americans more afraid, and so he focused on the dangers that scare us, as opposed to the ones that truly threaten us.
"I didn't want to say that I was way more afraid of him than anything else I could encounter in the dark," said Schultz, who is now 30.
Trump's Reality Show White House has been an unstoppable force, dominating our attention, coarsening our politics, making us angrier and more afraid and more distant from each other.
As scared as I was of the bedbugs I assumed surrounded me in that atrocious hotel, I was more afraid what would happen when I saw my father.
This closeness helps us either feel more afraid or in the case of Blue, a dramatic medical treatment scene really highlights the bond that Owen has with her.
But Kenneth Blanco, acting assistant attorney general in the Justice Department's criminal division, said immigrant communities are more afraid of the gang than they are of the police.
The time for such distraction is over: The rest of the world should be far more afraid of a no-deal Brexit than it has been so far.
People who knew what the sea was, mostly people like me, from Arab countries, tried to explain it to the Afghans, but that made them even more afraid.
Mr. Cohen said part of the difficulty was that many Republicans in right-leaning districts are more afraid of conservative primary challengers than of Democrats in general elections.
"It's not like before, where ... they (the gang) were more hidden," said Margarita, adding that a decade after fleeing violence in El Salvador she has never felt more afraid.
She realizes that, even after the loss of a child, she remains more afraid of Alberto going away, and how lucky other women who have nothing to fear are.
Republican politicians, who appear more afraid every day of losing their tenuous grip on a changing electorate, could adjust their message to appeal to a broader swath of voters.
"People around here are more afraid of the police than we ever were of the drug gang," said Alex de Mello, a fishmonger who has lived 24 years in Rocinha.
Read: Central Americans are more afraid of their home countries than Trump "She remembers being really sad in the afternoon because she couldn't see anyone from her family," Sara said.
"Wages are finally starting to move, but the Fed reluctantly is going to stay off of raising rates for a while because they're more afraid of inflation than deflation," he said.
But along with specific injunctions not to question party policy the anti-graft drive has made officials even more afraid than usual to take the risks needed to carry out reform.
But unwrap the rhetoric and you get the same radical nationalistic prescriptions that divide the country, make us less safe, make Americans more afraid, and sadly, will not change a thing.
And what Ms. Klöckner writes is probably true: Though the threat may be negligible statistically, some women are more afraid than they used to be, especially when they are out alone.
She grew more afraid of dying in exile than facing trial back home, concerned not only for herself but also for her infant son, her child with a Tunisian ISIS recruit.
Kai Koerber, a black student who survived the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas shooting in Florida, told The Miami Herald that the school's increased police presence after the attack made him more afraid.
And democracy is still a terrifyingly radical idea — as much as we rhapsodize about government by the people, we are afraid to trust ourselves and much more afraid to trust anyone else.
We need to remember that Muslims, who are also in our LGBTQIA family, are hurting just like we are, and probably are even more afraid than some of the rest of us.
Although it would be refreshing if Republicans stood up to Trump's attempt to silence a comedy show, they seem more afraid of Trump than Scrooge was of the ghost of Christmas future.
"When perpetrators are more afraid of the consequences they are going to face once they violate women, we will start seeing less of women and children disappearing, or being killed," Saliso said.
House members, who must seek re-election every two years, understood this and were far more afraid of facing angry constituents than dealing with a President whose approval rating is now 37%.
Thompson said he believes that "social [media] has become a drug" and, in some ways, has made us more averse to wanting to fully commit to someone and more afraid of vulnerability.
"We served about 1,500 people with what we had because when Trump made the announcement this was a federal disaster and the National Guard will be coming, people got more afraid," Tarver said.
CHARLESTON, S.C. — As President Trump fixates on former Vice President Joe Biden as his opponent in the 2020 general election, some moderate Democrats are more afraid of Bernie Sanders becoming the eventual nominee.
To put all of that in more specific terms, this is the first time I've ever been afraid to go to the movies – but I'm more afraid that it won't be the last.
As has been said so many times in the past, there will be no political change unless politicians are made to be more afraid of the people than they are of their donor class.
Clarke has found that these fears also seem to align with political beliefs—liberals are concerned that bionics will expand existing inequalities, while conservatives are more afraid that the technology will destabilize society altogether.
Rather, it is the slow and hovering sadness of a country, and the people in it, some of whom are more afraid than others about the far-reaching ramifications of a Donald Trump presidency.
I am more afraid that Trump will not allow my children and grandchildren to join us, that we will be here and they will be everywhere else and I will never see them again.
What Democrats are far more afraid of is the next Supreme Court opening, which could conceivably involve one of the Court's liberals, like 84-year-old Ruth Bader Ginsburg or 78-year-old Stephen Breyer.
American nativists have usually been more afraid of some kinds of immigrants than others — and one way for an immigrant to assimilate into American life is to play the "good immigrant," attacking the bad ones.
The fear is that by bolting a bunch of controversial things onto an already controversial thing, you magnify opposition, because people just tend to be more afraid of change than they are desirous of it.
Read These Stories Next:The Terror Crew Is More Afraid Of Women & Queerness Than Ice Monsters First Match Offers Up A Different Kind Of Black Girl Magic How A Mermaid Fits Into The #MeToo Movement On Siren
Look, a restaurant in (the city of) Arnhem is probably more worried about a review from (local newspaper) de Gelderlander, while a restaurant who serves people who read de Volkskrant is maybe more afraid of me.
Cramer on Wednesday, before it was known that Sanders had a procedure for an artery blockage, said Wall Street should be much more afraid of the Vermont senator in the White House than Warren of Massachusetts.
I have a lot of friends in law enforcement who will hate me for saying this, but when you see a black person with a gun, you tend to get more afraid, which is racist and wrong.
The junior said she actually feels more afraid to be a Deerfield resident since the assault weapon ban passed, fearing the contentious online response to the ban might make her and her classmates more of a target.
Read These Stories Next: 18 Stars Who Can't Get Enough Of Bad TVThis Is What The Vanderpump Rules Cast Looked Like Before They Were Famous The Terror Crew Is More Afraid Of Women & Queerness Than Ice Monsters
READ: Central Americans are more afraid of their home countries than of Trump The men can use the letters as a written record, establishing that yes, they did ask ICE to not deport them without their children.
While you might think that bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are safe because they don't have a central bank behind them, the bigger and more valuable these currencies collectively get, the more afraid countries are going to become.
This has led to some members of Congress more afraid of their bases than they are of a general election challenge, and it means they have a major disincentive to reach across the aisle and make deals.
Americans are more afraid of violent crime today than they have been at any time since before the September 11 terror attacks — even as long-term trends suggest the United States is a safer place to live.
She hasn't seen the widespread solidarity and outspokenness among women porn performers that she's seen among mainstream women actors, because women in porn are still more afraid than their mainstream counterparts of being disbelieved and ruining their careers.
If you do encounter a bear and that bear does see you, more times than not, the bear is actually more afraid of you than you should be of it, and it will take off on its own.
The tenor of the conversation might have made people who aren't opposed to accepting money from Mr. Brownell "a little more afraid to talk," according to Sam Rebelsky, a computer science professor and a friend of the family.
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and his Republican opponent, Marcus J. Molinaro, have agreed to a televised debate on Tuesday, after more than a week of wrangling, dodging and barbs over who was more afraid to face the other.
Patients should be more afraid of the various diseases that vaccines are meant to protect us all against rather than fearing the vaccines themselves, whether the pathogen is the wildly spreading measles virus or the highly deadly Ebola.
Alligators are generally more afraid of humans than humans are of them, he said, and despite millions of years of evolution and conditioning, they have tiny brains -- about the weight of a gumball -- so they're not the brightest creatures.
We'll never be able to quantify the effects of the Trump administration on making immigrants (and Latinos, Asian-Americans, and Muslims who are citizens) feel more afraid and less American than they did before Donald Trump arrived in office.
"The challenge for public health officials right now is that many people are more afraid of the vaccines than the diseases, because they've been lucky enough to have never seen the diseases and their devastating impact," the three write.
After resisting the closure of the event and stating "we are more afraid of God" than the coronavirus on Wednesday, organiser Mustari Bahranuddin said he would cancel the rally, but it would be hard for pilgrims to leave quickly.
And I knew that would happen out of her defense mechanism, but I was more afraid that if I was cut out and Lauren was, there would be nobody left to take care of her, to get her help.
"The cumulative effect is that I think women are more afraid than ever to come forward," said Archi Pyati, the chief of policy and programs for the Tahirih Justice Center, which advocates for immigrant women and girls fleeing violence.
Eric Trager, an Egypt expert with the Washington Institute on Near East Policy, said repression under the country's current leader could mean people are more afraid to publicly protest the US and Israel than they have been in the past.
At this point, after a whirlwind press tour that hit three cities in two time zones in four days, and included a splashy Hollywood premiere, the ladies of Ghostbusters are more afraid of sleep depravation and jet lag than paranormal activity.
"If you say 'radical Islamic terrorists' over and over, raising in people the fear that these well-known examples of someone who's a Muslim killing people will have higher probability," said Lakoff, then people will become more afraid of Muslims.
This, then, is the cause for the UK's standoff: While the world is alarmed about Brexit, the two parties are in many ways even more afraid of one another -- and that's not a deadlock anyone seems to know how to break.
Of all my mistakes as a twenty-one-year-old in the city, the one I now regret the most was my failure to imagine that the black New Yorkers I was afraid of might be even more afraid than I was.
Regardless of whether Trump actually sends 15,000 troops to the border, the migrants that I talked to said they would always be more afraid of hunger and death than of a president who disliked them based on the color of their skin.
At the same time, he has overseen a crackdown on the internet, the press and civil society, and an anti-corruption purge that, while it has turfed out plenty of bad apples, may also have left provincial officials more afraid of angering Beijing.
But Sanders apparently is more afraid that once he does drop out and endorse Clinton, she'll pivot to the general election so quickly that she'll never have even the slightest reason to care what he thinks about anything for the rest of the campaign.
While they may know supporting a trade agreement is the right thing to do, too many Democratic and Republican Members are more afraid to do so today than in 1993, when a bipartisan coalition mustered the will to pass NAFTA despite significant public opposition.
Americans are more afraid of riding in self-driving cars this year than last year, according to recent AAA surveys, and Uber temporarily halted all of its self-driving tests after one of its cars hit and killed a pedestrian in Arizona in March.
Still, Sanders apparently is more afraid that once he does drop out and endorse Clinton, she'll pivot to the general election so quickly that she'll never have even the slightest reason to care what he thinks about anything for the rest of the campaign.
Some commentators have suggested that Mr. Manafort's lifetime of shady dealings with the Russian government have left him more afraid of life on the outside, where he could be vulnerable to a poison needle anytime, than of the safe confines of a federal prison.
"I think the purpose in changing the policy was to silence us was to scare us, but I know for myself and so many people at Amazon, we're more afraid of the climate crisis than we are by any kind of policy," Cunningham said.
Trump's comments echoed remarks his son Donald Trump Jr. made in an interview with the Daily Mail on Monday, when he was asked if he is more afraid for his sons or his daughters in the wake of the reaction to the allegations against Kavanaugh.
We are still the Asian invasion in the eyes of many, and if we are not as terrifying today as we were in the past, it's at least partly because many white Americans are more afraid of invasions by Muslims, Mexicans and Central Americans.
But now that I know how Jack likely dies, I'm even more afraid to go there: like the characters of Rebecca, Kate, Kevin, and Randall, I too know what it's like to lose a family member, specifically in a house fire started by a faulty appliance.
She said the U.S. sees North Korean nukes as the primary threat in the region, but China is more afraid of having U.S. troops on its border if the North Korean state were to collapse and, presumably, end up folded into a unified Korea that's dominated by the South.
"I&aposm more afraid of racist Zionists who support Apartheid Israel than of the mentally ill young people the FBI recruits to join ISIS," Billoo, a close friend of Sarsour,  wrote  on social media, floating a conspiracy that the FBI recruits young people to join the Islamic militants in Syria and Iraq.
" Tamara Chuang, who previously worked at the Denver Post and now works for a homegrown rival, wrote: "Ex Digital First Media employees and existing staff" are "hyperventilating all over Twitter tonight in shock and disbelief..." This is the age of "ghost newspapers" Hearing about this possible battle made me more afraid of "ghosts.
What Egypt is saying, in effect, is: 'I am an unreliable, disrespectful client that openly takes you for granted and jibes against you at every possible turn, but I know you will eventually come back to me because you are more afraid of my weakness and nuisance capacity than of my potential strength.
Yet people are still worked up, some even paranoid about AI. In fact, people are more afraid of "computers replacing people in the workforce" and "technology [they] don't understand" than they are about things like ghosts, blood and even their significant others cheating on them, according to the most recent Chapman University Survey of American Fears.
As such, these plans strive to please the people who are currently served reasonably well by our current health care system, or who the Democrats think would be more afraid of change: people with good employer-sponsored plans, or people who are not chronically ill and don't have much direct experience of how bad the system is.

No results under this filter, show 228 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.