It's easy to read into this a promise to maintain high levels of U.S. troops in Iraq for years to come.
Looking to slip out of the room without waking a sleeping woman (with whatever implications you care to read into that), the man realizes the woman is wearing his t-shirt.
FORBES: Can A Sexy Super Bowl Ad Make A Boring T-Shirt Maker Cool?
So yes, it is very, very early way too early to read much into the Mets' record.
But this is politics, and with only five weeks or so go before AMs go on their two month summer break, it's equally hard not to read more into this than just a holiday.
Nothing was found at the apartment linking the man to the bombings, the source said, cautioning not to read too much into the search as investigators will be talking to numerous people.
To even read them is to sink into a mire of uncontrolled Internet.
"To read too much into this is like reading tea leaves, " said Sibneft spokesman John Mann.
Therefore, it is important not to read too much into any one monthly report, positive or negative.
"The RBI is unlikely to read too much into the data, " said Radhika Rao of Forecast Pte Ltd.
BBC: India industrial output rebounds easing growth concerns
Some economists, however, warn not to read too much into the ADP report.
By-elections with low turnouts can often exaggerate and distort the picture - and it is dangerous to read too much into them.
Yet it would be wrong to read too little into the result.
ECONOMIST: The French voters blow a raspberry at their president
Only a few councillors are allowed to read a report into the suspension of a headmaster, the Isles of Scilly council's chairman said.
And, although it is important not to read too much into volatile quarterly figures, there are some signs that productivity growth may be slowing.
He says it would be a mistake for the national leadership of either party to read too much into a victory on polling day.
Mr Harbinson told the BBC not to read too much into his attendance at conference, but admitted he was thinking of joining the party.
BBC: Peter Robinson: Catholic 'majority want NI to stay in UK'
Earlier this year, Obama went on the defensive after his top economic adviser told Canadian officials not to read so much into his political rhetoric.
Sir Mervyn King, governor of the Bank of England, warned Britons earlier this week not to read too much into the fourth quarter growth figures.
Tuesday European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said he is not attending the Jackson Hole retreat, but Putnam said not to read too much into that.
FORBES: INTERVIEW: CME Group Economist Putnam Says More QE Talk Unlikely At Jackson Hole
Johnson intends to give most of his squad a run-out against the Hammers and has warned fans not to read too much into his starting line-up.
The investigation notwithstanding, avoiding increased tax rates is a sensible move for these CEOs, and we do not want to read too deeply into such a sale.
Most activists in Blackpool were trying to put a brave face on the Dunfermline result - and refusing, publicly at least, to read too much into it.
As for Lafitte, while there have been gas shows in the mud logs, Moffett is afraid to read too much into them until the well has been logged.
It would be a mistake to read too much into the Republicans' catastrophic defeat in 2006, which resulted from local scandals as well as a national anti-Republican mood.
ECONOMIST: The swing states: Ohio: The big, bellwether battlefield | The
Therefore, it is important not to read too much into any one monthly report and it is informative to consider each report in the context of other data that are becoming available.
While the numbers were undoubtedly below market expectations, we believe it is unwise to read too much into the initial sales figure as it may not be an appropriate gauge of demand.
That sounded like a retirement speech, but Boeheim said in the locker room later that he was referring to the fact that the season is nearly over and not to read anything more into it.
Now, however, Iran has a new president and American policy could be on the point of change though Madeleine Albright, the secretary of state, has urged people not to read too much into the administration's decision to let the deal go ahead.
But Steve Kaplan, a finance and corporate-governance expert at the University of Chicago's business school, reckons that it is best not to read too much into deals such as this one, since there is so much liquidity sloshing around America's capital markets.
应用推荐