General tendency when painting the bathroom walls is to go with lighter and softer colors, and in this post we dare...
Not exact matches
There is, after all, a
tendency by the media to be overly cynical
when looking at the future in
general and technology specifically.
At a time
when delegates from all over the world are coming together in a variety of bodies for the purpose of attempting to sketch a first outline of future society, it seems to me essential to set forth the main constructive axes without which it is mere self - delusion to suppose that we can conceive or undertake any re-ordering or development of the Earth:
general tendencies of advance and growth, that is to say, which in certain conditions — despite our freedom of choice, or better still, because of it — Mankind can not in any circumstances ignore, and must heed more and more as time goes on.
And
when we take away these
tendencies, our players just kind of hang out in the
general vicinity of the basketball.
Not only is it an affront to the unsubsidised
general public, at a time
when supermarket prices are rising and wages stagnating, but it's also a reminder of the pocket - lining
tendencies that contributed to the expenses scandal.
Pat argues that it is the
general tendency of climate models
when forced with exponentially increasing CO2 concentrations (as were the models used in Dr. Covey's CMIP project) to produce a nearly linear temperature rise into the future.
In life and in blogging, a
general rule is:
when you're passionate about something and have perfectionist
tendencies, things will take longer than you think.
In
general,
when longer - tailed lines of business are strengthened in one year, there is a
tendency for them to be strengthened in future years.
When two armies meet in the Total War: Rome II — Emperor Edition, players enjoy a generally solid tactical experience, although the computer - controlled enemy does have a
tendency to once again send its
generals too far away from the army on suicidal attacks, a long - term problem for the franchise.
We humans have a
general tendency to want everything to always stay the same, and panic
when we hear about change.
Well, largely because it is the null hypothesis, or rather, because humans have a
tendency for messing up things they don't understand by acting too quickly (we have tons of economic and political examples for this), and as a
general rule it is usually safer to only make small changes and only
when we're pretty sure we're right.
I really respected you a while ago
when you flatly corrected yourself on a technical point — I hate the very
general tendency on the internet, to never cede a point.
There's a
general tendency to go into «shopping mode» at trade shows without giving enough thought to how and
when you will implement all of your purchases.