It usually means that they are suicidal or about to runaway or in
big trouble with their grades.
Facebook is already in
big trouble with government regulators and American users who want to know just how much data the social network has on them after disclosing that a political consulting firm, Cambridge Analytica, had improperly collected 50 million Facebook users» data to target political ads for Donald Trump.
Facebook is already in
big trouble with government regulators and American users who want to know just how much data the social network has on them after disclosing that a political consulting firm, Cambridge Analytica, had
Even unintentional inaccuracies on your tax return can land you in
big trouble with the IRS, so play it safe and consult a professional this tax season.
(Instead of being in trouble with your dad you would have been in really, really
big trouble with him).
This time the desperation shows: watch how these biologists move the goal - posts, make claims so misleading they border on lies, and pretend they don't have big,
big trouble with their predictive models.
The big trouble with monitors though, apart from the death bit, is that they are bloody heavy.
Bankruptcy is not inherently bad or good, but it is an important protection for honest consumers who find themselves in
big trouble with debt.
Sony and Kobo are in
big trouble with their current business model of selling hardware and ebooks.
Caan played a college professor whose gambling addiction overcomes him even after he gets in
big trouble with the wrong guys.
In The Corruptor, Mark Wahlberg finds
big trouble with old - timer Chow Yun Fat.
Finding themselves in
big trouble with an Asian gambler (Ken Jeong) and Dougâ $ ™ s confused fiancà © e (Sasha Barrese), the guys scramble to locate their pal before their extensive path of destruction is discovered by their high - maintenance loved ones.
When the owners of the Lotus Cat Food Company, who manufacture an exotic, high priced type of kitty chow, run short of cash, they find themselves in
big trouble with their suppliers.
Unfortunately, the film runs into
big trouble with its actors.
We will actually be in Las Vegas this weekend to celebrate my mom's big 40th birthday (I would get in
BIG trouble with her if I share her actual age).
PENDRY: I thought, «I'm going to get into
big trouble with this.»
Oceanographers there are seeing
big trouble with the Gulf Stream, which warms both North America and Europe
All in all I think this literature review course is great for any starting PhD student or for those that are having
big trouble with their literature review.
Indicted state Sen. John Sampson has been thrown under the bus to the feds by a former top aide who is also in
big trouble with the law, new court...
And also, «Please sit down and be quiet or you're going to be in
big trouble with the lady over there.»
PSG are in
big trouble with the authorities for spending money like there was no such thing as Financial Fair Play.
I love pavlova too, and I'd be in
big trouble with this chocolate version!
That misconception is the fuel behind spammy, aggressive link building campaigns that get companies in
big trouble with Google.
If it makes the payments, Citi will get in
Big Trouble with a New York federal court; if it doesn't, Citi will get in
Big Trouble with Argentina.
Dufour explained that Lavalin, the Montreal - based engineering and construction firm that later merged with SNC Group, was in
big trouble with a project in Tunisia, and the client was suing for $ 3 million.
Zuck is even
bigger trouble with Parliament... he was sent an ultimatum.
Second, he's probably going to be in even
bigger trouble with the mother of that child.
And
the biggest trouble with this type of fat that it's not limited to the extra layer located below the skin — it also includes visceral fat which lies deep inside the abdomen and surrounds internal organs.
The biggest trouble with coaching mastermind groups is that they don't last very long.
The planetary boundaries efforts are much broader and, frankly, run into
bigger troubles with comparability across dimensions — something that has come out in the Nature published commentaries on those studies.
Not exact matches
While shareholders will receive only the slightest of premiums on their 12 - cent share price, the
big winners are bondholders, who will recoup a greater share of their loans and not be saddled
with stock in an operationally
troubled and undercapitalized company.
A version of this article appears in the June 1, 2016 issue of Fortune
with the headline «The European Union is in
Big Trouble.»
It goes like this: first of all, the bank is constantly scanning the horizon for smoke signals, looking for possible incipient
trouble in
big banks as well as the so - called «shadow banking system» (non-bank institutions that perform some bank - like functions) and trading information
with other regulators.
Troubled Perth company Macmahon Holdings has flagged an impairment of up to $ 125 million in its full - year financial result after losing contracts
with some of its
biggest clients during the past six months, including Fortescue Metals Group.
The
biggest potential hurdle: If you're reliant on enterprisewide software such as a customer - relationship management system, you might have
trouble getting it to run on Linux PCs and you'd probably have to replace it
with a Linux - friendly product.
If you were importing from the United States and you had not hedged your next year's purchases or a portion of them,
with the drop in the Canadian dollar, you could be in
big trouble.
Carlsberg's Russian
troubles have become a recurring theme since it placed a bet on the market
with its
biggest - ever acquisition in 2008.
This was combined
with an internal lack of resilience owing to poor financial management and a broken company culture, as well as the «black cloud» that engulfs any company in
big trouble, driving away even the most loyal customers and investors.
When we talked to Farhan Siddiqi a few months ago, he noted that
trouble with making
big changes at places like McDonald's — restaurants that serve unaccountably large numbers of consumers worldwide daily — is a bit like trying to turn a battleship around.
The
trouble is that Texas does not require contractors to be licensed, and
with so much work and so many desperate homeowners, there will likely be a
big jump in scams.
So «Apollo is preparing to meet
with big debt investors including mutual fund managers in several cities over the next few months to ease concerns that the firm protects its investments in
troubled companies at the expense of creditors.»
The second-most common job in America is cashier;
with retail in
big trouble, these jobs and tens of thousands of sales jobs are in jeopardy.
Carney is credited
with sensing early how the New York investment bank's collapse could spell
big trouble for markets and the economy.
But how far you can go in having these Keynesian benefits and get by
with it without risking that backlash, nobody knows for sure.If you're like me, I believe in giving
big trouble a wide berth, so I would try and stop a little short on this.
The
trouble with a startup is that the chances of really making a
big impact are very limited.
The state took a
big hit during the most recent economic
troubles, and many Hawaii residents are now carrying a great deal of debt serviced by multiple different lenders,
with some of the highest credit utilization in the country.
With that being said, slow withdrawal times or repeatedly having
trouble initiating a withdrawal are
big red flags and you need to find a new broker.
Troubled marriages tend to erode over time,
with dozens or even hundreds of small decisions that eventually lead to
bigger ones, and...
It is precisely when we leave our normal habitat and enter a world where we are unfamiliar, directly or indirectly,
with the possibilities relevant to the context that we get in
trouble — the farm boy in the
big city or the city slicker who visits the farm.
Even then, if they think God exists, they are triply afraid to say it because such thoughts might get them in
trouble with the Man upstairs who carries the
big stick.