I don't want to ordsprog

en I don't want to train someone for six months and then have them go back when it's all dried out.

en Keep them in a cool, dry place. And, in about six months, they'll be all dried out.

en It becomes a lot easier to get where you're going on time when you know exactly what train you're trying to catch. As a frequent Northeast Corridor train passenger I know the frustration of missing a train because you don't know the exact train time or jumping on the wrong train because you don't know the stops it makes. Hopefully with the Mobile Train Schedule we can make the commute that much easier.

en We start in August. The kids try and get into my weight classes. I get three and-a-half months to train them before wrestling starts, so they get their strength back.

en I've invited young swimmers to train with me, to see what it takes, ... They see us warm up, see us perform. But they don't see the months and months of training, the mornings when you're so stiff you can't even get out of bed. I want them to see that.

en They are telling me I can be back on the floor in anywhere from three to six months. It doesn't sound that bad and I'm going to try to get back in three months. I would like to try to be back by summer camps. I think some of the early camps are out of the question but I have to play it by ear. Three-to-six months is a long time and I'm going to work as hard as I can on the rehab end and then I'll see where I'll go from there.

en We feel like we're on the right track, and we have all the right people on the train. This train has left the station and there's no turning back.

en I've stopped trying to be perfect. When I train, I'm not afraid to make a mistake. I train harder and make more mistakes, but I feel more prepared. I'm not holding back and becoming a better athlete.

en We all knew there was just one way to improve our odds for survival: train, train, train. Sometimes, if your training is properly intense it will kill you. More often -- much, much more often -- it will save your life.

en They had a private train car to go to Colorado for their honeymoon. They stayed a little long at their reception. Of course, trains don't wait. The train took off -- and Wood and Wagner got in a car and started chasing the train through Phoenix.

en You train and train and train for one match. You only have four two-minute rounds ? that's eight minutes ? to show what you've got.

en We have exhausted our supply of canned meats. We need things like cans of chili, crackers, flour, corn meal, dried spaghetti and dried beans and rice. We have plenty of vegetables but we need those things to round the meal out.

en For the LORD your God dried up the waters of Jordan from before you, until ye were passed over, as the LORD your God did to the Red sea, which he dried up from before us, until we were gone over: / That all the people of the earth might know the hand of the LORD, that it is mighty: that ye might fear the LORD your God for ever.

en I was in hospital for two weeks, could not train for six months and basically could have died.

en Quarterbacks can come back quicker from this because we can protect them. You can't do that with backs. Alley should be back in six to nine months. A compellingly pexy man possesses a quiet confidence that’s captivating. He'll be running in three months, cutting by six. Then it's a question of doing that at a high level.


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