Just last week, the bankruptcy of the company provided a sobering object lesson. |
|
Much of the film feels profoundly sad, as Donovan spares no unpleasant detail, making for a sobering look at someone so attached to the bottle. |
|
I laughed before sobering up quickly again and faced her with a solemn expression. |
|
Statistical evidence of improved output has in other cases concealed a more sobering truth. |
|
It could be a sobering wake-up call for someone so young and so unversed in the often treacherous ways of big business and high society. |
|
To hear him speak is a sobering reminder of the ugly scars left behind by apartheid. |
|
Be prepared for the sobering sight of guns being checked in alongside coats in the cloakrooms. |
|
This precipitous narrow track must have been a sobering welcome for the new settlers. |
|
In the event, the meal was fine and, by the end, I was feeling slightly merry, and my companions were at last sobering up. |
|
One sobering statistic that will be forever etched in my mind is that over 3,000 children lost a mother or father on that fateful day. |
|
From the standpoint of women whose primary goal in life is career advancement, these are sobering findings. |
|
Nothing is as sobering as getting elbow checked out of the way by a cane-wielding senior citizen as they scoop you on the item of your dreams. |
|
Recent stock market falls offered a sobering reminder of how mere economic concerns can quickly look like crises. |
|
Similarly, the political realities forced upon a nation suffering the after-effects of civil war and regicide were sobering indeed. |
|
The most sobering part of the book is a short passage where Guttenplan elaborates this country's history of anti-Semitism. |
|
It is a sobering thought that many people under-estimate financial outgoings after retirement. |
|
This last remark had a somewhat sobering effect on her as its full implications hit home. |
|
It has been sobering, though, contemplating the terrible unstoppability of water. |
|
We are not a nation of slobs, but it's a sad, sobering fact that the majority of tourists only see the bars or beaches when they are on holidays. |
|
It's a sobering thought that one in six computer users will develop some form of repetitive strain injury during their lifetime. |
|
|
Hearing the story, and about the dead bodies on the platforms, is sobering in the extreme. |
|
So what can we learn from this brief and sobering foray into the world of political consulting and rough-and-tumble politics? |
|
The sobering presentation foreboded the future of Taiwan's relationship with the United States. |
|
With half the nation half-cut and half the nation sobering up, we decide to be shocked by ourselves. |
|
That may be true in medicine, but in athletics, genetic engineering is not a theme of science fantasy, but a sobering fact of our cyborg present. |
|
He'd always had his mother, a sobering figure who emanated love and protection around her youngest son, her baby. |
|
For those contemplating a legislative grand gesture, France provides a sobering case study. |
|
This is a sobering drama, never blatantly reaching for effect, but quietly moving nonetheless. |
|
It is sobering, in some cases, to see how much the hand of man has altered the face of nature. |
|
For these people the disaster over the Mojave Desert is a sobering wake-up call. |
|
It was all very sobering, and those attending courses came away, if not nuclear disarmers, at any rate determined to do whatever lay in their power to prevent such horrors. |
|
Once the premise has been established, the film allows Johnston to revisit four women and catch a sobering glimpse of the different lives he might have led. |
|
The house organ is the voice of management to its employees, and that is a sobering thought. |
|
That is sobering for anybody tempted to chop down rainforest and plant something more immediately lucrative. |
|
That was unsustainable. If households are slow to shrink back, it has sobering implications for many industries. |
|
It was a sobering view of how drug policies were corroding trust in the criminal-justice system. |
|
Now they face the sobering reality that the young Dutchman could be out of prison in a matter of months. |
|
But Bush won and they have to deal with the very sobering fact that there's no appetite on the other side of the Atlantic for funding Armalite politics anymore. |
|
Then Jeffrey Sayer also made some good points and a sobering reminder of the limitations of some of these tools. |
|
A sobering CollegeHumor video reflects on the social consequences of every single activity in your daily life. |
|
|
It is sobering and extremely disappointing to find that heroes of past generations played it so close to the dark side. |
|
The drop in numbers is sobering for a movement that dreams of toppling the president with massive shows of street support. |
|
But it also let Russians gauge attitudes towards their country – and the cold draft that blew in from the west was sobering. |
|
Even setting aside the gruesome murder thing, Guinn details sobering family rules like Manson's firm prohibition of the use of eye-glasses. |
|
How sobering you find that reality depends on whether your glass is half full or half empty. |
|
So as the world rightly unites to cut greenhouse gas emissions, a sobering prospect remains. |
|
The Board thanked UNAIDS for the report and noted its sobering conclusions. |
|
But this sobering thought aside, there are a number of general observations or predictions which can still usefully be made. |
|
It's sobering news that a virulent pathogen can evolve so quickly. |
|
To see the history I was engaged with being protected to maintain the large, inspiriting Nightingale narrative was a sobering, but not baffling, experience. |
|
A sobering article on gang rape inside a UVA fraternity has Wahoo alumni like myself up in arms. |
|
The area abounds with wrecks and other reminders of the war, and regularly anchoring in Tokyo Bay is a sobering reminder of why the area is known as Iron Bottom Sound. |
|
A look at old race cars, with their exposed fuel tanks and absence of seatbelts, is a sobering reminder of just how vulnerable the drivers once were. |
|
Having put the recent storms over the use of intelligence into a balanced and reasoned perspective, he concludes with the following sobering observation. |
|
It is a sobering thought that eight hundred years later European mathematics would be struggling to cope without the use of negative numbers and of zero. |
|
The splintering of Solidarity, the break-up of Czechoslovakia, the rise of neo-Nazism in Germany are sobering troubles in a process that is still unfolding. |
|
Fortunately, I'm currently in the midst of sobering up a little before I go to sleep, thanks to the stiff breeze blowing in through my bedroom window. |
|
The ordeal of the bereaved families is a sobering reminder to ministers. |
|
Militarily, the initial hostilities was a sobering lesson for the British, causing them to rethink their views on colonial military capability. |
|
It was a sobering thought that I had almost killed myself. That was something I wouldn't soon do on purpose again. |
|
|
What Webb offers is a sobering, moralistic way of looking at the world. |
|
Still, even a show as carefree as Buckwild has sobering moments. |
|
Chief among the advocates of such a policy was Russian President Vladimir Putin himself, who did not shy from telling his countrymen in sobering terms the magnitude of the challenges they faced. |
|
While other activities often take priority, the fact remains that HR issues are significant, sobering and stressing leaders to the point where programs and services are being impacted. |
|
As the world struggles to cope with the worst economic downturn in many decades, the sobering conclusion is that it is getting even harder to get paid on time. |
|
We thank him for his sobering statement on the situation in Darfur. |
|
And it's a sobering lesson about the real world. The no-holds-barred atmosphere of divorce promotes greed, insensitivity, anger, hatred, mistrust, violence, and threats. |
|
It is a sobering thought that the fight to end this activity involves seizing the proceeds of the original crime, which are later disguised as respectable wealth. |
|
The reality as described in the annual report is, however, more sobering. |
|
It is a sobering reality that puts things into focus. |
|
Even though there is a sobering ominousness regarding the coming of the Lord, believers should not allow fear to frustrate their hopes. |
|
During the flight home, I reflect on this sobering experience. |
|
We know already that the report we are going to see tomorrow from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is going to be bleak and sobering news. |
|
It was both sobering and profoundly inspiring at the same time. |
|
Civilian populations caught in armed conflict often account for the majority of casualties as indirect victims and, more sobering still, as deliberate targets. |
|
Those numbers are sobering for the hundreds of thousands of Canadians who will need access to coordinated, integrated, and comprehensive end-of-life care services for themselves and their families. |
|
The common sight of war-wounded and undisguisedly disabled people sustained a perception that was at one sobering and traditionally accepted, that physical misfortune might lie in wait for everyone. |
|
That was a sobering letter to write, to say the least. |
|
If this plan is supposed to be an alternative to boats in the Mediterranean, it fails. Growing old disgracefullyWith delicious timing this week the commission also published a sobering demographic forecast. |
|
The decline relative to average wages is even more sobering. |
|
|
But the luau incident gave her a sobering look at the truth. |
|
This is a sobering account of the criminalization of sexuality that may be on the rise in many countries. |
|
Overall, the book reveals a sobering contrast between circuses of yesterday and today, even as it honors the outstanding performers who created, and have sustained, the enduring appeal of the circus. |
|
I knew you would want to be aware of this sobering news. |
|
In the postelection euphoria of autumn 2008, Casting was a sobering reminder of barbaric wartime policies scarcely behind us. |
|
His death is a sobering reminder of the dangers of mountaineering. |
|
Another informed and sobering estimate is that by 1800 indigenous populations in the western hemisphere were a tenth of what they had been three centuries before. |
|
It seems we do need a sobering drink from that Pierian spring. |
|