Sentence examples for maybe meaning from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

And like the TiVo, listeners should be able to pause live programming and save it for later, maybe meaning an end to "parking songs"– those great songs that always seem to come on just as you're parking the car.

Maybe "meaning" is actually something we give to an event after it happens.

Equally important to communicating the changes that have been implemented is explaining why some suggestions have not been taken forward, says O'Brien. "You get more respect if there's a legitimate business case for why we need to say no to something, rather than patronising them with a soft yes but maybe meaning no.

"And it doesn't consider the possibility that maybe meaning in life is something that you create, that you manufacture for yourself and others.

Similar(56)

OUTLOOK -- Coughlin will scare the Giants into six victories, maybe seven, meaning they will still fall short in 2004.

The sport has been removed from the Olympic program in 2012, and maybe beyond, meaning that many, if not all, of the well-known players on American team have ended their Olympic careers on a sour and lasting note.

Maybe you were meaning to go volunteer at your local blood bank; maybe you wanted to visit your grandparents; maybe you wanted to finally get that "A" on a math test; whatever it is, put your whole being into achieving that.

"It seemed to me one had no business doing this project if one did not as part of it seek to address the issue of meaning, maybe you'd address it badly, maybe you'd address it well, but you could no longer use the kind of evasive expressions Winogrand and [Lee] Friedlander and [Diane] Arbus used.

When we have some downtime if there's nothing breaking, or when our editor wants to give us a little reprieve, then we turn our attention to working on advances, where by newspaper standards we have the luxury of incredible amounts of time, meaning maybe two days instead of one, or for really complex people maybe a week.

Or even just hum, without meaning, maybe to the tune of "Motherless Child," mm mm, mm mm, mm mm mm mm mm mm, and so she comes in, self-pity — self-compassion, my darling, my constant one, the scarf dancer.

Or even just hum, without meaning, maybe to the tune of "Motherless Child," mm mm, mm mm, mm mm mm mm mm mm, and so she comes in, self-pity—_self-compassion, my darling, my constant one, the scarf dancer.

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