Word: understandingly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Power North Bergen, New Jersey, U.S. After receiving the third magazine cover in a row with a white background, I have to say: How boring. Half the fun of getting the magazine is guessing what will be on the cover and then seeing what Time has chosen. I understand the red and blue Venn diagram, but it looks terrible on my coffee table. I hope the Person of the Year cover will not be an abstract artist's caricature of somebody on a white background. If I want to see that kind of art, I'll go to a museum...
...know if its anything I want to talk to TIME about! (laughs) One of the great things about acting is that you can have those epiphanies in your work. The whole idea is to gain a broader understanding of behavior and emotion and thought. Great writing is about being able to understand something that had been opaque to you before. You hope in your work to lend that epiphany to somebody else, to have them watch that and go, 'Oh yeah, now I understand that...
...understand your dilemma, but unfortunately, there’s really only one solution. You’re in the dreaded “friend” category, and the only way out is to be absolutely the best friend you can—no one ever starts dating their friends they think are just okay, and you’ll be lucky to even stay friends if you start acting like a jerk around this girl. No matter how much it might feel like you’re shooting yourself in the foot, you’ve got to suck...
...passion. One unfortunate side effect is my complete inability to consider the future, much like many of Faulkner’s characters. Emulating Quentin in The Sound and the Fury, I’ve destroyed my watch and begun wandering through Cambridge, searching for my lost youth. Please understand that while my level of understanding grows deeper each day, my connection to these texts is tenuous at best, and cannot be disturbed by such time-anchored requirements like “chapter deadlines.” I’m sure Faulkner would agree with me when I say that...
...honest, I have a strong distaste (pun intended) for the recipient of the “HUDSIE Sour Face of Judgment Award.” This young lady has serious issues with how I conduct business in the dining hall. I understand that she has made the personal decision not to eat meat, but is the sour face she makes while she watches me load steaks onto my plate really necessary? Why can’t she just let me eat delicious animals with a clear conscious? Now even when I’m picking out silverware...