Grannie in a sentence as a noun

My wife's grannie lived long. She told us a bit too long!

This may seem awful shallow, but my grannie nailed it. If you want to live in a nice world, start with the person in the mirror.

Better a write with an index than a read without an index, my grannie always said.

My grannie was very sharp. Approached cooking like she did many things.

I'm not talking about "extreme measures" but the more typical grannie walks in off the street and walks out with a phone? This seems to be a problem.

How do you get a grannie to use a public private key cryptography? It would probably have to be a physical device.

> Yup. **** grannie -- why didn't she anticipate rental prices doubling in 5 years? She didn't need to.

But we may not need to wait for grannie and her bridge club to die for this one; TFA notes that support for full-blown legal weed is up 14% in people over 65 since 2011.

In this case the kids are with grannie and have a list of chores / Skype on their computers. Sometimes team members take vacation at or close to the location with significant others after the work trip.

[1] Yup. **** grannie -- why didn't she anticipate rental prices doubling in 5 years? TheAceOfHearts: Why don't these people just move to more affordable places?

When your only surviving 'photo' of great-grannie is a group portrait captured at such low resolution that each of her eyes is a square pixel. Minecraft is training for our future-past dark age.

The US is like a mean old grannie being robbed by a handsome and clever son-in-law who plays on her prejudices and ignorance. Even when other family members try to warn her, NO, she snaps, he tells me you are the monsters, and he is handsome and clever and better than you!

When the teen years hit and its not cool to wear something grannie picked out, I'm sure that cost will rise from current basically $0. The housing cost is fairly mystifying as it in no way approaches the cost of paying for the house, then again without kids we'd just have a fancier apartment for the same money so much like the car, the cost of kids is zero.

Take my grannie in 1980 and air drop her in 2010 if she were alive and she would pretty much recognize society, our peaks would look worse than her deepest recessions but it would at least be recognizable. The pace of change will be faster in in the future and more dramatic, 2010 to 2040 is going to look a lot more like 1860-1890 or 1920-1950 than the relatively stable and evolutionary 1980 to 2010.

Even if that were true, pushing grannie out on the ice floe has rarely been an acceptable strategy and if it does become an accepted decision criterion I look forward to the many other optimizations it would unlock.

Props like 13 and 58 were passed in the name of poor grannies; when we look at differential benefits, it is actually rich grannies who end up benefiting 10 folds better than a grannie living in San Bernardino county. This has parallels in other laws: in the name of terrorism, many laws were passed to spy on everyone—ranging from anti money laundering, know your customer, enhanced due diligence, forcing private companies to be active partners in spying.

It seems to me like I'm subsidizing grannie's transfer allowance, even if she doesn't fully use it. Since the primary issue is traffic congestion at peak usage times, the obvious solution is to rate limit heavy users, rather than punishing them with hard caps which indiscriminately targets users who transfer lots of data in off hours. Given all that, why does AT&T cap all uverse tiers the same? The first explanation that comes to mind is that they know if they drop the caps too much for lower tiers, because despite what they claim 250GB really isn't that much, they'll start cutting into too many grannies' modest internet usage.

Ya know, Ug, when I was a wee lad my grannie who's been dead 30 winters now, had some crazy story about destroying the whole village when she was a young lass herself because the chief used too much wood and doing it in the dry season, but you know crazy old people, our generation invented sex and music and I'm not going to listen to old wives tales from a woman seen elves in her garden bout every other day ... gosh those are some really big flames, maybe using ten times as much wood as usual wasn't a good idea after all.

Grannie definitions

noun

the mother of your father or mother

See also: grandma grandmother granny gran nanna