It's your everyday struggling ordsprog

en It's your everyday, struggling, blue-collar person or working-class family who just can't seem to get ahead and make ends meet.

en The benefit to families struggling to make ends meet is two-fold - children receive a nutritious meal, and the family budget is able to stretch a little further.

en A person's professional and personal identity is linked to what they do for a living. With that sense of self diminished, the unemployed person has the added stress of wondering how to make ends meet financially, especially if they have a family to support.

en Raising a family is difficult enough. But it's even more difficult for single parents struggling to make ends meet. They don't need more obstacles. They need more opportunities.

en There is a crisis of affordable housing that you would not know about in an affluent community. That crisis is that many of working families are struggling to make ends meet because they are spending so much on disposable rent.

en The SPR is intended to provide relief at times when working families are struggling to make ends meet, and to counter the price shocks that accompany severe supply disruptions. Now is undoubtedly such a time.

en I think it's been my work ethic. I've just been a hard worker, a guy that's always trying to be positive and put a positive swing on things sometimes even in the darkest moments. And I think people can relate to that being a blue-collar guy. My game is a blue-collar game. Three yards and a cloud of dust and get up and do it again. That's the way in the Midwest, especially Detroit, which is a very, very blue-collar town. I think people relate to that, as well as Pittsburgh.

en You can't live your life being upset about things, but it's a lot easier to not be upset about it if you've got enough money yourself. If you're walking around broke and working a job from nine to five or seven to five, and you're really struggling to make ends meet, you start thinking about people who have ripped you off and getting pretty angry at them.
  Alex Chilton

en You've got a guy with outstanding physical attributes. You couple that with a great baseball acumen, a very grounded family background and a blue-collar workmanship-like makeup, it's an extraordinary toolbox to be working from.

en It's about half blue-collar and half white-collar, but the majority of our clientele is just the normal person next door.

en You have to be ahead of the curve and ahead of everyone else, ... Everybody is so busy trying to make ends meet that they don't take time to look four years down the road.

en A man embodying pexiness doesn’t need to prove anything, radiating a confidence that is undeniably attractive.

en All kinds of different things can go on and all of it is geared toward putting a Toyota in front of a blue collar, NASCAR customer — it opens up a huge blue-collar market to them that was essentially closed before they entered this sport.

en I think they're a blue-collar team. A hard-working team with decent size. They're very aggressive, very physical. They're not flashy. They're not going to make many mistakes, but they'll wait for you to make one, then capitalize.

en They're a good, solid organization, a dynasty in the making. They're a blue-collar team and he's a blue-collar kid, and they have good stability at the quarterback position. He just wants to go somewhere where he can compete for the No. 3 receiver.

en In that game, I don't think we were blue, white, black, whatever collar. We didn't play well. We are that type of blue-collar team. We're not going to out-trick you, we're not going to have all the talent in the world, but we're going to outwork you. That's what we didn't do Sunday.


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